• Mustang Forums
  • Mustang Sound & Shine All

Wax a new car??

  • Thread starter Thread starter sweet66coupe
  • Start date Start date May 23, 2004
S

sweet66coupe

Founding Member
Aug 14, 2002
115
0
0
Virginia
May 23, 2004
#1
  • May 23, 2004
  • #1
i've got a 03 mustang with 7,000 miles on it and people keep telling me i shouldn't wax it. would it hurt anything or is anything wrong with waxing a car this new? i have no idea so a little help and experience with this matter would help. thanks
 

exceldetail

New Member
Apr 25, 2004
39
0
0
May 23, 2004
#2
  • May 23, 2004
  • #2
Sweet, consider the alternative...Do nothing, and you suffer oxidation, rust intrusion, lack of shine and depth....Why wouldnt you want to polish and wax your car ??? This makes absolutely no sense to me....Waxing any car off the lot is safe, chances are its at least several months old anyway.....Let me know if you need some tips, id be glad to help you out on product selection....
 

szer0

New Member
Sep 7, 2003
354
0
0
Selinsgrove, PA
May 24, 2004
#3
  • May 24, 2004
  • #3
Wax Wax Wax Wax Wax Wax
 
R

rjstaaf

Founding Member
May 31, 2002
1,310
2
39
Somewhere
May 24, 2004
#4
  • May 24, 2004
  • #4
Meguiars explains it better than I can.

"A new car with a factory paint job can be waxed the moment it is rolled out of the manufacturing plant. Cars that have factory paint jobs are cured at much higher temperatures, sometimes as high as 300 degrees in special baking ovens. At a factory level, the car goes through the painting and baking process without any of the rubber, plastic, and cloth components installed. This is why they can expose the car and it's fresh paint to such high temperatures. These high temperatures and special paints used at the factory level insures the paint is fully cured by the time the car is completely assembled.

After-market paint finishes however, are cured at a much lower temperature to ensure the method of baking or heating the paint doesn't melt non-metal components such as wiring and vinyl. For this reason, it's best to follow the specific paint manufactures recommendations for care and maintenance of fresh paint. Most paint manufactures that supply paint to the refinish industry recommend that you allow anywhere from 30 to 90 days curing time after the paint is applied before you apply the first application of wax.

To maintain your cars fresh paint during the recommended curing time you can safely use any of the below Meguiar's pure polishes, which are not only safe for fresh paint but help to enhance the curing process while making your paint look it's absolute best."

The reason you have to wait 30-90 days before applying a wax or sealant on an aftermarket paint job is that the solvents need time to evaporate out of the paint. If they are trapped, they will prevent the paint from fully curing and will cause major paint problems down the road.

Get some wax on that paint ASAP
 
S

sweet66coupe

Founding Member
Aug 14, 2002
115
0
0
Virginia
May 24, 2004
#5
  • May 24, 2004
  • #5
i didn't think it was bad but like three people told me it was so i thought should check it out. i've got some mothers california gold carnauba wax. is that good stuff or should i get something better? my 66 is my first car and had bad paint so i didn't really worry about it but now that i've got practically a new car i'm really particular and want to do everything right so i'll probably be asking a lot of questions. thanks
 

szer0

New Member
Sep 7, 2003
354
0
0
Selinsgrove, PA
May 24, 2004
#6
  • May 24, 2004
  • #6
sweet66coupe said:
i didn't think it was bad but like three people told me it was so i thought should check it out. i've got some mothers california gold carnauba wax. is that good stuff or should i get something better? my 66 is my first car and had bad paint so i didn't really worry about it but now that i've got practically a new car i'm really particular and want to do everything right so i'll probably be asking a lot of questions. thanks
Click to expand...

I've read that carnauba doesn't last as long because it's natural, but I also read that it creates sharper reflections.
 
You must log in or register to reply here.

Similar threads

Vacuum line question?
  • Mustang Momma
  • Feb 10, 2026
  • 1996 - 2004 SN95 Mustang -General/Talk-
Replies
1
Views
151
1996 - 2004 SN95 Mustang -General/Talk- Mar 3, 2026
Noobz347
J
MEED HELP!! 86 mustang
  • Jacob0121
  • Jan 23, 2026
  • 1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk-
Replies
6
Views
311
1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk- Apr 25, 2026
CAMTWO1070
C
New mustang owner
  • CPH89LX
  • Apr 26, 2026
  • The Welcome Wagon
Replies
3
Views
116
The Welcome Wagon Apr 27, 2026
91AOD5.0LX
New Member from outside Pittsburgh, PA
  • OldTymeToys
  • Jul 16, 2025
  • The Welcome Wagon
Replies
11
Views
427
The Welcome Wagon Jul 23, 2025
Noobz347
T
What's it Worth? 2002 GT conv/auto
  • tonydetesta
  • Jan 7, 2026
  • What is it Worth?!?!?
Replies
3
Views
612
What is it Worth?!?!? Jan 21, 2026
Mustang5L5
Share:
Bluesky Email Share Link
  • Mustang Forums
  • Mustang Sound & Shine All
Menu
Log in

Register

  • Forums
  • What's new
  • Media
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • Sponsor
X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?

X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?