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Detailing Techniques intermediate 8 min read

Getting That Deep Show Shine: Prepping Your Car For The Local Meet

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Getting a car ready for a show isn't just about a quick wash and some tyre shine. It's about deep cleaning every nook and cranny and making that paint pop under the Aussie sun.

B"W
Barry "Bazza" Williams Product Reviewer
| Updated: 4 March 2026
Getting That Deep Show Shine: Prepping Your Car For The Local Meet

Aussie Conditions

Australian conditions are tougher than most—intense UV, red dust, coastal salt, and 40°C summers. European car care advice often doesn't cut it here.
Quick Summary

Look, whether you're heading to a local Cars and Coffee or a proper judged show, the difference between a tidy car and a real head-turner is all in the prep work. After 15 years in the trade, I've seen blokes spend thousands on mods but forget to clean their door shuts, which just ruins the whole vibe. This guide covers how to get your paint, wheels, and interior up to show standard while dealing with our lovely Aussie dust and UV levels.

01

The Show Car Mindset

Right, so you've got a show coming up this weekend. Maybe it's a big event or just a Sunday morning cruise, but you want the car looking mint. In Australia, we've got it tough, the sun is brutal, the dust is everywhere, and if you're near the coast, the salt is constantly trying to eat your chrome. I remember prepping a black VF Commodore for a show in Geelong a few years back. The owner had been parked under a gum tree for a week, and the sap had basically baked into the clear coat in the 38-degree heat. I spent six hours just on the bonnet! The lesson there? Start early. Show prep isn't something you chuck together at the servo on the way there. It's a process of decontamination, correction, and protection. If you do it right, your car won't just look good; it'll be protected against that harsh March UV.
02

The Essential Kit

What You'll Need

0/9
Two Buckets with Grit Guards — Don't skip the grit guards, mate. You don't want to be rubbing dirt back into the paint.
Quality Clay Bar or Clay Mitt — I reckon a medium-grade clay bar is best for getting that 'glass' feel.
Iron Decontaminant — Something like Bowden's Own Wheely Clean or Gtechniq W6.
Dual Action (DA) Polisher — If you're serious about the shine, you need a machine. Even a basic one beats doing it by hand.
Polishing Pads and Compounds — Grab a range, heavy cutting for scratches and a fine finishing pad for the gloss.
Isopropyl Alcohol (IPA) Wipe — To strip old oils so your wax or sealant actually sticks.
Carnauba Wax or Ceramic Sealant — For shows, I still love a high-end wax. It gives a depth that coatings sometimes lack.
Soft Detailing Brushes — For the badges, fuel cap, and air vents.
At least 10 Microfibre Towels — You can never have enough. Once it touches the floor, it's a rag for the engine bay only.
03

The Prep Work

Tap each step to mark complete
01

The Wheels and Arches

Always start with the wheels. If you do them last, you'll splash brake dust and grime all over your clean paint. Use a dedicated wheel cleaner and get right into the barrels. If you've got red dust from a trip out west, you'll need a stiff brush for the wheel arches too.

02

Strip Wash

Wash the car with a high-pH soap or even a bit of dish soap (don't tell the purists) to strip off old waxes and oils. This gives you a 'naked' surface to work on.

03

Chemical Decontamination

Spray an iron remover over the dry paint. If it turns purple, it's working. This pulls out metal particles from the road and train tracks that a normal wash misses.

04

The Main Event: Achieving the Mirror Finish

Tap each step to mark complete
01

Clay Bar the Entire Car

Go over every inch with a clay bar and plenty of lubricant. If the clay feels like it's grabbing, add more lube. You want the paint feeling smooth as a baby's backside. If you skip this, your polisher will just grind dirt into the paint.

02

Dry Thoroughly

Use a big drying towel or, better yet, a leaf blower. You don't want water dripping out of the mirrors while you're trying to polish. Water spots are a nightmare on a show car.

03

Tape Off the Trim

Use blue painter's tape to cover rubber seals, plastic trim, and badges. Trust me, getting dried white polish off black textured plastic is a job I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy.

04

Test Spot

Don't just launch into the whole car. Pick a small area on the boot or lower door. Start with a light polish and a soft pad. If that doesn't clear the swirls, move up to a heavier combo. No point removing more clear coat than you have to.

05

Machine Polishing

Work in small 50cm x 50cm sections. Use slow, overlapping passes. Don't rush it. This is where the magic happens. You're trying to level out those tiny scratches that make paint look dull in the sun.

06

The IPA Wipe Down

After polishing, wipe the panels with an IPA solution. This removes the polishing oils so you can see if you actually fixed the scratches or just filled them in. It also ensures your wax bonds properly.

07

Apply Protection

For a show car, I'm a sucker for a high-quality Carnauba wax like Meguiar's Gold Class or something from Bowden's. It gives a 'warm' glow that ceramic coatings can't always match. Apply it thin! If you put it on too thick, it's a prick to get off.

08

Glass and Chrome

Clean the glass inside and out. For the outside, I actually use a bit of fine glass polish to get rid of water spots. Give the exhaust tips a rub with a dedicated metal polish too, judges always look at the pipes.

09

The Interior Detail

Vacuum everything, then go over the dash with a matte-finish protectant. Avoid the shiny 'greasy' look, it looks cheap and reflects off the windscreen. Use a soft brush in the vents to get the dust out.

10

Tyre Dressing

Apply a water-based tyre shine. Give it 20 minutes to soak in, then wipe off the excess with an old rag. This prevents 'sling' (black dots of grease) from flying up onto your freshly polished doors when you drive to the show.

The 'Hidden' Spots

A customer once brought in a beautiful GTS for a show prep, and while the paint was 10/10, the door hinges were full of old grease and dirt. The judges noticed instantly. Spend 10 minutes with an all-purpose cleaner and a brush on your door shuts, boot channel, and fuel filler area. It makes a massive difference to the overall 'clean' feel of the car.

Watch Out

Never, ever polish or wax your car in direct Aussie sunlight. The metal gets so hot it'll bake the product onto the surface instantly, and you'll be left with a streaky mess that's nearly impossible to level out. Work in a garage or under a gazebo, and wait until the panels are cool to the touch.
05

Keeping the Shine Until Judging

So you've finished the prep, but you've still got to drive to the show. If it's a long haul, expect some bugs. I always keep a 'show bag' in the boot with a high-quality quick detailer and a few plush microfibres. When you arrive, give the car 15 minutes to cool down, then lightly mist the detailer over any bug splats or dust from the road. Whatever you do, don't use a dry towel to wipe dust off, you'll just scratch all that hard work you put in. Also, keep an eye on the birds. If a magpie decides to use your roof as a toilet, get it off immediately. Bird droppings in the March heat can etch into your wax in minutes.
06

Common Questions

Should I use a ceramic coating or wax?
For a daily driver, ceramic wins every time. But for a show car that lives in a garage, a high-end wax often has a richer, deeper look that really pops on reds and blacks.
How do I get rid of 'orange peel'?
Orange peel is in the paint texture itself. You'd need to wet-sand it, which is a massive job and carries big risks. Most of the time, a good machine polish makes it much less noticeable anyway.
What's the best way to clean an engine bay?
Cover your alternator and air intake with plastic bags. Use a gentle degreaser and a brush, then a very light mist of water to rinse. Don't go nuts with a pressure washer in there or you'll be calling a tow truck.
Why is my black car still showing swirls?
Black is the hardest colour, mate. You might need a finer finishing polish and a softer pad. Also, check your towels, if they aren't surgically clean, they'll leave marks on black paint as you wipe.
07

The Final Wipe

At the end of the day, show prep is about 90% perspiration and 10% products. Don't get too bogged down in the 'latest and greatest' ceramic-infused-titanium-whatever. Stick to the basics: get the paint clean, get it smooth, and take your time. If you do that, you'll be standing there with a beer in your hand on Sunday feeling pretty bloody proud of your rig. Good luck with it!

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