You should always used a drying aid when drying to prevent scratching. After 4-6 months of so if you have build up it’s time for a decontamination wash to start over. The customer doesn’t want you to use the same dirty towels that you used for other cars on his car, again to prevent scratches. He most likely properly washes and dries his towels after ever use. They look like Rag Company towels which are some of the best in the world. He may also had a deionized water system hooked to his hose to prevent spotting from the minerals in the hard California water that we have here. This customer reminds me of myself. I have two Teslas that I have never let anyone wash. After spending thousands having the soft Tesla paint (that’s really not of the best quality) corrected ,coated and in my case protected with PPF, you want keep your vehicle looking their best for as long as possible. This customer trusts you to maintain his vehicle, don’t be offended by his requests. There’s definitely a method to the madness. He probably would prefer to do it himself, but for whatever reason may not be able to. Age, health issues, time ect…By the way my wife thinks i’m crazy! 😜
We’ve had clients that wanted us to use their products for details. I would say due to the fact people want to pay less than you charge a lot of times I would just make sure to let future clients who may feel the same that we are firm on our prices. If the chemicals are provided no problem I wouldn’t mind using them saving us money and possibly time since they would typically have everything ready In their garage. It wouldn’t be an ideal thing just because we love to establish some sort of level of trust and if it is that serious they could just do it themselves.
Depends on the vehicle. If it’s a ceramic coated vehicle then you should add a topper to boost the ceramic & longevity of the coating. But it’s also up to you what you want to offer on your maintenance details. I do a lot of weekly/bi-weekly maintenance. I only re-apply a dressing once a month, so I do it every time on my monthly clients. If you’re talking about interior dressings, then no. That should be done on your initial detail before starting maintenance schedules. Then you can re-apply when you notice the interior dressing is diminishing, I would notify customer that if they wish to reapply it will be at their expense.
My maintenance does not include seat wipe down just seat vacuum. That’s probably the only difference between yours and mine so when I’m by myself for a sedan I will be done in a hour and for suv depending on size anywhere from hour and 10 to an hour and 20
@@tylerjordanspry9342then your not very detailed , you should always wipe down seats even if they don’t look dirty , dead skin cells builds up , maybe even spills. Give what the customer pays for !
@@irvin33030 I wouldn’t maybe like once or maybe twice a month because if you use it all the time your going to compound that product on your paint which may sound good but may not be the best
@@HuntersMobileDetailing How do I get faster at detailing it takes me over 1 hour to just do the interior and a hour and a half for the exterior How do I charge more for a detail I charge $70 to do the whole car under carriage and all
Hello I have to comment on when a customer wants you to use their water be quiet and use their water Because that is a plus 4 you let's tear and wear on your equipment so don't complain or fuss with a customer that's trying to help you be quiet🤫 Just show up and clean the vehicle And get paid for🤷🏾♂️ If he ask for a discount you're getting paid to getting your vehicle to come and you're getting paid for your time You don't have to worry about using your equipment that is the good thing Anytime my customers let me use their water I'm good with that
These can be difficult things to deal with...and throw you off. What I do, is I'm a stickler on things that can potentially damage the vehicle in any way. Hard water...for my maintenance clients, they get spot free, period water spots can damage the paint and be very tough to get off, costing the customer hundreds more to remove....I don't want there to be any chance that the customer tries to put blame on my for water spots. Towels....I only use my towels, period. I dont know what they do with their towels, how they wash their towels, or how they store their towels. If all this is done wrong, it can damage the paint. Again I dont want to be responsible for damaging the vehicle in any way. Because at the end of the day, your the professional, and your the one doing the detail. THE ONLY way I would allow this, is having something in writing and signed by the customer stating the risks, and a disclaimer about potential damage. and then try and educate the customer as to why.
I always have my own drying towels and all adams polishes liquids. Some get offended. Most respect it. The water thing is not that much of a. Issue to me. I would also tell you ahead of time. Before your arrival
Bro leather get scratched up regardless by ppl sitting on it and rubbing they ass on it. It ain’t gotta be that difficult. There’s ppl that detail, and then there’s ppl that detail for show. I always tell customers to stay away from ppl that try to sell their detailing by super specific lies. Like for instance detailers that can’t do headliners, they all automatically say oh you can’t bc there’s risk. Nah man. Just gotta know how to do it correctly/
@@1ahozz yeah I don’t think you can read. So you’re telling me rather than applying a coating after detailing is worse than lightly barely getting dirt off the leather seats? He’s being cheap.
Same had a client tell me to Only use his chemicals cause chemical guys is the only brand he trusts, ghosted his ass after the first detail for that one 🤣
Ay bro your van looks pretty equipped so why no matter what why do u always have so much crap on sidewalk or work area ? Tbh that doesn’t look professional at all
@@HuntersMobileDetailing I get it but you have to look at things from outsiders looking in we’re detailers so clean ,neatness and organization is what ppl think of when they think of detailers ,hoses I get being all out but interior caddies why don’t you keep them on the customers trunk so it’s not out in the open .
Towels make sense but the water things kinda overkill. Dude is just being dramatic at that point. Dude has a $150k tesla tho I guess better safe than sorry in his eyes. Ultimately if he’s willing to pay our prices, I’ll keep using his towels and water lol
I think you're timing is good. As long as your client is providing quality towels, that's great!
I wash my own car and even maintenance takes me at least 2 hours lol. Great video Wayne, as usual!!
I'm from Virginia and I've been watching your videos for awhile now hopefully by this spring I'll have my mobile detailing business
You should always used a drying aid when drying to prevent scratching. After 4-6 months of so if you have build up it’s time for a decontamination wash to start over. The customer doesn’t want you to use the same dirty towels that you used for other cars on his car, again to prevent scratches. He most likely properly washes and dries his towels after ever use. They look like Rag Company towels which are some of the best in the world. He may also had a deionized water system hooked to his hose to prevent spotting from the minerals in the hard California water that we have here. This customer reminds me of myself. I have two Teslas that I have never let anyone wash. After spending thousands having the soft Tesla paint (that’s really not of the best quality) corrected ,coated and in my case protected with PPF, you want keep your vehicle looking their best for as long as possible. This customer trusts you to maintain his vehicle, don’t be offended by his requests. There’s definitely a method to the madness. He probably would prefer to do it himself, but for whatever reason may not be able to. Age, health issues, time ect…By the way my wife thinks i’m crazy! 😜
Special request calls for extra ..
@@1ahozz
Heyyyyyy 😀
For leather seats I use a detail brush and vacuum at same time
Hey Wayne love your channel here in Sydney Australia 🇦🇺 😀 keep up the great work that you do mate 👍
🙏🏾
All glory to the most high ! 🙌🏼
We’ve had clients that wanted us to use their products for details. I would say due to the fact people want to pay less than you charge a lot of times I would just make sure to let future clients who may feel the same that we are firm on our prices. If the chemicals are provided no problem I wouldn’t mind using them saving us money and possibly time since they would typically have everything ready In their garage. It wouldn’t be an ideal thing just because we love to establish some sort of level of trust and if it is that serious they could just do it themselves.
Every product works directly different , so this is hard one to bypass
Awesome job young man!
Bruh gave his own supplies 😂just do it yourself you have the stuff ready😂😂
Money can’t buy experience
Tesla has the cheapest quality “leather” and interior plastic.
Detail a masarati 😅
And you would know how?
@@Batmanduhh Maserati leather is far better than Tesla hands down. I’ve owned both cars, Tesla is overhyped
@@butskiiueepp1625 Because I’ve owned both of them
That’s a fact, I’ve done 3 and all have some sort of issues
I'd be thrown off by the client having his own towels & water, but as you said... a client is a client!
Can’t wait to retail store.👍🇺🇸
The client is a helper 🤣
When doing maintenance do you always have to apply a dressing to make it look shiny ?
Depends on the vehicle. If it’s a ceramic coated vehicle then you should add a topper to boost the ceramic & longevity of the coating.
But it’s also up to you what you want to offer on your maintenance details. I do a lot of weekly/bi-weekly maintenance. I only re-apply a dressing once a month, so I do it every time on my monthly clients.
If you’re talking about interior dressings, then no. That should be done on your initial detail before starting maintenance schedules. Then you can re-apply when you notice the interior dressing is diminishing, I would notify customer that if they wish to reapply it will be at their expense.
My maintenance does not include seat wipe down just seat vacuum. That’s probably the only difference between yours and mine so when I’m by myself for a sedan I will be done in a hour and for suv depending on size anywhere from hour and 10 to an hour and 20
Also the same, I do wipe down small imperfections on leather seats. But doing the whole seat does waste time on a maintenance
@@tylerjordanspry9342then your not very detailed , you should always wipe down seats even if they don’t look dirty , dead skin cells builds up , maybe even spills. Give what the customer pays for !
But what if his or her water is bad what do you do about that
Great vid bro!
Where are you located?
Mix bead maker with dream maker 10:1 whole new ball game with those too
Do you recommend using it weekly ?
@@irvin33030 I wouldn’t maybe like once or maybe twice a month because if you use it all the time your going to compound that product on your paint which may sound good but may not be the best
@@MIDNIGHTMOBBIN yeah I use dream maker for my weekly wash and bead maker once a month never mixed them Together like you said
I love the new logo
Thanks 🙏🏾
@@HuntersMobileDetailing
How do I get faster at detailing it takes me over 1 hour to just do the interior and a hour and a half for the exterior
How do I charge more for a detail I charge $70 to do the whole car under carriage and all
Happy holidays fam! Keep the vids coming 👍🏽
Hello I have to comment on when a customer wants you to use their water be quiet and use their water Because that is a plus 4 you let's tear and wear on your equipment so don't complain or fuss with a customer that's trying to help you be quiet🤫 Just show up and clean the vehicle And get paid for🤷🏾♂️ If he ask for a discount you're getting paid to getting your vehicle to come and you're getting paid for your time You don't have to worry about using your equipment that is the good thing Anytime my customers let me use their water I'm good with that
Wayne is the man!! Great crew all around. Keep em coming brotha
Thanks bro
Ive told many people this that has detailed with me 3:00 that look at me like im NUTS lol
It’s not leather, it’s vinyl type material. I have 50k on my Model 3 , it still looks great. But I take care of it
These can be difficult things to deal with...and throw you off. What I do, is I'm a stickler on things that can potentially damage the vehicle in any way. Hard water...for my maintenance clients, they get spot free, period water spots can damage the paint and be very tough to get off, costing the customer hundreds more to remove....I don't want there to be any chance that the customer tries to put blame on my for water spots. Towels....I only use my towels, period. I dont know what they do with their towels, how they wash their towels, or how they store their towels. If all this is done wrong, it can damage the paint. Again I dont want to be responsible for damaging the vehicle in any way. Because at the end of the day, your the professional, and your the one doing the detail. THE ONLY way I would allow this, is having something in writing and signed by the customer stating the risks, and a disclaimer about potential damage. and then try and educate the customer as to why.
Let’s get it
Let's go!
I always have my own drying towels and all adams polishes liquids. Some get offended. Most respect it. The water thing is not that much of a. Issue to me. I would also tell you ahead of time. Before your arrival
Bro leather get scratched up regardless by ppl sitting on it and rubbing they ass on it. It ain’t gotta be that difficult. There’s ppl that detail, and then there’s ppl that detail for show. I always tell customers to stay away from ppl that try to sell their detailing by super specific lies. Like for instance detailers that can’t do headliners, they all automatically say oh you can’t bc there’s risk. Nah man. Just gotta know how to do it correctly/
ShowReady is a detailers end goal . If not your jus a car wash guy…
@@1ahozz yeah I don’t think you can read. So you’re telling me rather than applying a coating after detailing is worse than lightly barely getting dirt off the leather seats? He’s being cheap.
I hear you , what you need Tbh spray wax don’t last long so yeah there’s always should be some drying aid to prevent marring every wash.
Customer: No?!? I don't want my paint being messed up.
Hunter detailing-And the customer right. Peep game
?????
8:03 when you said this. I like how you handled business there.
I had a client want me use his own chemicals, thought that was odd.
Same had a client tell me to
Only use his chemicals cause chemical guys is the only brand he trusts, ghosted his ass after the first detail for that one 🤣
@@butskiiueepp1625 HAHA
But Reyes what about the gas😂
What happened w your connects at H2O? Y’all not cool?
He is too picky if you have insurance that's what that's for.
Faster? Why not BETTER? Speed should not be the main focus
Because speed is something I need to grow in I tend to spend to much time.
Why not both?
Tesler 😂
Bruh if he brings the towel and water, he should do it himself
True I thought the same until I seen how old he was
Ay bro your van looks pretty equipped so why no matter what why do u always have so much crap on sidewalk or work area ? Tbh that doesn’t look professional at all
Because I’d rather have it all out and ready then to run back and fourth. I can work on organizing a little more yes. Thanks for your advice.
@@HuntersMobileDetailing I get it but you have to look at things from outsiders looking in we’re detailers so clean ,neatness and organization is what ppl think of when they think of detailers ,hoses I get being all out but interior caddies why don’t you keep them on the customers trunk so it’s not out in the open .
First
Towels make sense but the water things kinda overkill. Dude is just being dramatic at that point. Dude has a $150k tesla tho I guess better safe than sorry in his eyes. Ultimately if he’s willing to pay our prices, I’ll keep using his towels and water lol
TESLER 😂😂