We're a well-established car care company based in Herefordshire UK. With almost two decades of hands on experience in the car care and refinishing industry we have a wealth of knowledge to share with our customers. All Autoglanz employees are petrol heads at heart and strive to achieve perfection as a way of life. The factory and office building are the heart of Autoglanz, from manufacturing, development and research of the products right through to warehousing and administration we manage each step of the process by hand.
Autoglanz was established originally in 2013 with an aim to develop some of the best cleaning and detailing chemicals available on the market without the hefty 'scene tax' and released to the public in mid 2015. We like to do things a little different here rather than going with the grain, the market is quite saturated when it comes to different brands but we like to think we can offer something unique, with our slightly 'out there' approach to the industry.
Finally a detailing video that's relatable on a dirty car, most of these videos feature a car that's as clean as it gets by my standards or either a 360 step 4 day restauration project.
hahaha i grew up in the 80's ,,,, step 1 fill a bucket with water and a scoop of laundry detergent or dish liquid... step 2 wash car,,, step 3 turtle wax paste... step 4 beer time ... yalll enjoy spending 75$ on designer detergents. ill stick to dish liquid
Nice video! Its interesting to see there are different schools to come to the same goal! Wich is best? Well. Scandinaviance have a different approach, concidering level of dirt and season. The most important is that one feel happy with the result 🙂
Fabulous mk4 golf and love the colour. Owned my mk4 golf gti for over 20years and still love it,being showing it for a few years know ( ultimate dubs ) .
It looks amazing! Personally i would get rid of the eye lids and paint the front grill yellow too for a cleaner look. But that's how i'd do it. Still looks amazing in every way possible.
I have heard that you shouldn't apply polish to a ceramic coated vehicle as it can wear down / entirely strip the coating. If this is the case, I am wondering how these steps might be changed for a ceramic coated vehicle. Obviously you would not do the polishing step, but I am wondering if there are any other alterations to the process you would have? Some sort of ceramic coat protector at the end? Would you use different products for washing / cleaning? Or any different methods of application? Thanks
Is it wise to wash a car in a dirt parking lot? Why do all the cars look so cheap? And why does the woo-hoo wow music keep cutting out? This whole video makes me hate detailing.