Water spots are generally the result of ground water that has dried on a vehicles finish. Ground water has minerals and other things such as iron oxide (rust) so when the water evaporates on the body of the vehicle it leaves behind all the minerals.
There are two ways to get rid of these water spots.
One Method is to use a Vinegar bath. This has worked for a long time on minor to somewhat moderate water spotting. Just clean your car, then apply 100% distilled white Vinegar to your car, let it sit for a minute and rinse off. Then re-wash your vehicle.
For those stubborn water spots there is a acid that you can purchase from detail suppliers. One such product is "Splash" it is a Sulfuric and Hydrofluroric acid mix that you put on the vehicle a 2'x2' section of the panel and rub a few times and then wash off and repeat until water spots are off.
This is the most dangerous method as these combination of acids can burn your skin, and cause other health and body panel/window damage if let to dry on the panels/windows. Wear Gloves, long sleeve shirt and a breathing mask and goggles when using.
Go here to find a product that I use that works: http://www.automagic.biz/solvents.htm
You can remove red spots from a paint job by repainting the surface. The red spots can also be removed with a nonabrasive scouring pad.
take paint brush, dip in red paint, brush over white spots ;)
Any colour you want! Why not paint it brown so it blend in with your garden, or paint in red with black spots to make it more ladybug-like.
If the white paint is well-bonded to the surface, and the red is very fresh, a lot of times you can use a sharp razor blade to peel the red paint off the white. If the red is stuck on there, I would use a sanding block to remove as much red paint as I could without damaging much of the white paint, then put a coat of white paint over the area. Next time, get a newspaper and tape it to the white walls to protect the building.
dude i think no matte what you try, u are going to trash your paint job hope you know who put the conctete their so ya can recoupe the repairs
no they have pink spots on them if the spots are red they are highly poisoness
Depends on how much paint you want, If you want 11 gallons, three gallons of red are needed. If you have two gallons of white paint, you'll need three quarts of red paint. Take however much you need to do the job, divide that amount by 11, multiply that total by three and that will tell you how much red paint you need.
The Grinch on New Years!
No, there is no gold in red paint.
storms
spots
To get red paint, one can use blue and purple paint. One can use red and yellow to then make orange. Blue and yellow will make green paint. Red paint can also be purchased.
No, it actually isn't higher... The only time a vehicles paint significantly effects the price of Auto Insurance is when you have a "Custom Paint" job and you have selected full coverage. This is because in the event of damage, a custom paint job is typically more expensive to repair than factory paint. White and black automotive paint is generally the least expensive colors of paint.