When I looked into it locally, a four-coat ceramic application was around $1,600, and the 3M application that I got was half of that. The ceramic undoubtedly looks amazing, however, it is still only rock chip resistant - of the shops that I was looking up they all had a disclaimer saying as much. That's what I was most worried about since where I live, every time it snows significantly the city puts down gravel. The gravel doesn't get cleaned up until the spring, which can leave ~3 months of rocks spitting up from the vehicles in front of you. If I lived in California, Arizona, etc. (little or no-snow places) I think I would have opted for ceramic only.
First, a question, what's the point of doing four ceramic coats? - 1,600USD is insanely expensive.
Ha ha, I have no friggin’ idea. According to the Ceramic Pro guys, that’s the gold standard that gets you the best mileage out of the coating, but that could easily be BS - I haven’t a clue, which would make me their target demographic. I told my wife tonight that I was thinking of getting the ceramic on top of the extra 3M and she asked me if I was high. She said that in 10 years of owning the Camry we traded in the paint looked just fine with 3M only.
Hmm, I don’t know what I expected her to say, but I shouldn’t have been surprised. I know that there are a bunch of detailing fanatics over here that would take umbrige with that comparison, but I know where she’s coming from. So whatever I do to protect the non-filmed parts of the car, it’s going to have to be significantly more inexpensive than the Ceramic Pro guys’ gold standard. I might have to re-watch the Karate kid to remember that solid waxing technique..
Here is a good web page that describes the different options with prices.Thank you @Euljiro1ga for bringing this to light. My question is: what would it cost to do a single layer of ceramic coating instead of 4? Anyone know?
Thank you so much, @Chris! That is a HUGE difference in price per number of layers. If I do ceramic coating I'll start from the bottom and if it wears off in 6 months or I'm not satisfied with the quality I'll consider moving up a level or two next time.Here is a good web page that describes the different options with prices.
Note: I might be a little Leary of anyone quoting prices without seeing the car as the correct prep work will make or break how well it looks. If they haven't seen your car I'm not sure how they can know how much prep work is involved.
http://www.padautodetailing.com/ceramic-packages.php
I had the front of the car done to the vents on the hood, including lights chrome mirrors, all the door edges, bumper back of the hatch. Cost 1200.00 Cdn as they had no template and had to custom cut all the pieces, can hardly tell it's there. With the amount of sand (looks more like gravel) they put on the roads here it's pretty much a necessity if you don't want stone chips.When I got my car I had the dealership apply 3M to the hood (just past the lights), the head lights themselves, bumper, A pillars, that bit of roof between the windshield and the pano-glass and the side mirrors. However, the chrome accents on the front of the car (around the grilles) wasn't done, and since that are is basically the most susceptible to being hit by road stuff, I'm wondering if I should have it done.
Also, without mud guards (still can't order them yet, at least in Canada) the area of the panels directly behind the tires seems to be prone as well - so I'm thinking about getting those four areas done, regardless of if/when I get the mud guards.
What did you guys get done, and did that include the chrome in the front of the car?
And yes, for a proper car coating, you'll work several days. Shampooing, handwashing, then again the whole car with flying rush speck remover, then degreaser and sometimes claying ... depending on the dirt/age. And only then coating. That is why it costs 1000+.