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05-04-2026LAST POST
04-15-2026
Its finally warming up on the East Coast and I am itching to give the black G80 a good detailing. This includes wash, clay, 2-Step correction to get rid of the swirls and minor scratches from the nasty winter we had. Then finally do a ceramic coating. But of course the nasty green dust has started to coat everything in sight as well as trigger allergies. Should I wait to do this once the trees and grasses have finally stopped pushing out pollen or is it OK to do the coating since it gets mostly wiped off once it sets up? I don't have a garage so its gonna be outside. Helpful tips appreciated.
04-15-2026
If it’s outdoors, I’d say you’re going to be fighting with it. Personally, unless it’s going to be this weekend, I’d wait. It’s going to get bad pretty soon.

I have a garage and I may still wait to do one of my cars.
04-15-2026
fiveightandten wrote
If it’s outdoors, I’d say you’re going to be fighting with it. Personally, unless it’s going to be this weekend, I’d wait. It’s going to get bad pretty soon.

I have a garage and I may still wait to do one of my cars.
Ok. Thats what I was thinking. Maybe do the paint correction now and wait to do the coating??
04-15-2026
Unfortunately pollen season has only begun, its best to wait or do it after a good heavy rain, or after the pollen season. I've been wanting to wash both my vehicles, but now its 90 degrees, so I have to wait until the weekend, and do it early before its get too hot. The one good thing, is that my vehicles are ceramic coated. :D
04-15-2026
Yuille36 wrote
Unfortunately pollen season has only begun, its best to wait or do it after a good heavy rain, or after the pollen season. I've been wanting to wash both my vehicles, but now its 90 degrees, so I have to wait until the weekend, and do it early before its get too hot. The one good thing, is that my vehicles are ceramic coated. :D
The oak tree pollen out here in Leesburg is atrocious! We're supposed to drop into the low 60s after the rain Sunday, after potentially setting heat records today.
04-15-2026
John in VA wrote
The oak tree pollen out here in Leesburg is atrocious! We're supposed to drop into the low 60s after the rain Sunday, after potentially setting heat records today.
Same here. Though I am on the jersey coast we get pine and grass pollen. Salt spray and rain is common. So I will wait to coat but the scratches on the hood and trunk lid got to go!!

I think if I do that then all I will need to really do is wash and clay it again before coating it. Kinda split up the three hours or more into two sessions. Thoughts?
04-15-2026
At the height of (pine) pollen season here the half of the car you just washed will have a layer on it by the time you finish with the other half. I mostly just accept that my cars are going to constantly have a layer of pollen for about 1.5 months a year. Thankfully we're nearing the end of it now.
04-15-2026
As long as you apply the ceramic within a short period of the final wash, there shouldn't be any problems. It will make washing the car easier, so I would apply it as soon as possible.

I think your plan is good - wash, clay, and correct as needed. Unless the scratches are automatic carwash bad, maybe one step correction will suffice. I would definitely try one-step first just to respect your time.

A NanoSkin can save you a lot of claying time, too, if you have a buffer.

Charles
04-16-2026
JerseyM3 wrote
Ok. Thats what I was thinking. Maybe do the paint correction now and wait to do the coating??
You could decon and correct to save some time later. Perhaps do your clay, iron remover, and compound. Then in 4 to 6 weeks you can do a quick clay and polish, which should take off what contamination has settled on the car in the interim, and finish the correction (clean /change pads often).

You’ll probably need to spot decon the rear bumper, behind the wheels etc. Best results come from just doing it all in one shot, but that’s not always feasible.

And this kind of depends on the paint color and your threshold fur correction. Eg my M40i is white and I corrected to remove ~70% of defects. If the car is black I wouldn’t get away with the same plan.
04-16-2026
Phillies8008 wrote
At the height of (pine) pollen season here the half of the car you just washed will have a layer on it by the time you finish with the other half. I mostly just accept that my cars are going to constantly have a layer of pollen for about 1.5 months a year. Thankfully we're nearing the end of it now.
Haha. This is the truth. The past few years, it looks like there’s snow on the ground in early May. And I wind up just hosing off the green / yellow stuff every other day to keep it somewhat under control, and only washing to keep it from building up. The car isn’t going to look clean for more than an hour. Haha.
04-16-2026
What’s one step and two step correction? I’m guessing one of them is light polish.
04-16-2026
JoeyO wrote
What’s one step and two step correction? I’m guessing one of them is light polish.
Generally it’s a compound with more aggressive / coarse abrasive, followed by a polish with a finer less aggressive abrasive.

Sometimes polish is all that’s needed. But if the paint has scratches and macro imperfections, those are more easily removed with something more aggressive. Then the polish refines the surface to ensure there isn’t any hazing or holograms that can be left behind by a compound.

Compound removes scratches. Polish makes the paint more reflective and glossy.
04-16-2026
I think I'd wait until after the trees get done doing their thing. It's probable that the pollen won't affect the application but I wouldn't risk it.

I found that a gray day is best, the even light from all around really makes it easy to find any high spots you might have missed when removing the coating.

I brought my kid to swimming lessons last night, we parked and got out of the car. I realized that the air looked funny and that it was pollen actively coming from the trees nearby almost like it was snowing. We got back in the car and moved to the opposite end of the lot!
04-23-2026
I’m in a similar situation—also in the Northeast, though I do have the advantage of a garage. My plan is to complete the full process in one go: wash, decontaminate, clay bar, polish, and follow with a panel wipe before applying a ceramic coating. Given that the car is black, I’m aiming to get everything done over a single weekend to minimize contamination and ensure the best possible finish.
04-29-2026
Always good to do coating. I HIGHLY recommend Gtechniq CSL first then top it with EXO. Even with just EXO the surface is so much slicker its way easier to dry the car and less of the pollen sticks to the surface.
05-04-2026
+1 a coated car makes everything easier.

This time of year, I often blow the cars off with a leaf blower to keep the pollen somewhat under control. It’s important to do this to clean out the windshield cowl area. Junk can build up in there and clog the drains. It’s also the area where the cabin air is introduced so good to keep it clean. You can pop off the covers easily with the 1/4 turn thumb screws for full access.

Washing the car is an exercise in futility. As it’s filthy with pollen again almost immediately. But I’ve added a DI water filter to my setup, and that allows me to just rinse with the pressure washer and leave the car to dry without touching it. No spots, no residue.

Between the leaf blower and spotless rinse, I can keep things looking ok with minimal contact washes until the pollen subsides.
05-04-2026
It is a night-and-day difference. With my E63 AMG having black paint, you’re essentially dealing with a mirror that highlights every speck of yellow dust, so having that slick ceramic layer is a lifesaver for getting the pollen off without inducing those dreaded swirl marks.

With my M3 being Mineral White Metallic and the X5M Donnington Grey their both more "forgiving" colors. They tend to mask that light dusting and road film remarkably well, though once the pollen really builds up, even those metallic flakes can’t hide the green tint.