Quote: A 20 ft trailer at $150 a foot is $3000.00
Minus at most $500 for materials. = $2500 profit.
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Anyone who has attempted polishing knows it can be more than buying some special polish, and putting a special buffer to the metal. Polishing can be an art form. It's the experience that goes into polishing that makes you an expert. I have polished. I am not an expert. I am becoming an expert.
When I started polishing for the first time I learned a lot of things that I would do on the next pass. To say, I must have done my trailer three times over during the learning experience. Following different methods that I found on the internet. Each round can take three to four passes to get to a final stage. Not to mention the black stuff that gets all over everything.
Depending on the severity of oxidation, type of metal, working temperature, angle of buffer, quality of buffing pad, cleaniness of rags, type of rags, type of polish, how many different grades will be used, and a whole lot more tips you can only get by doing. You would be fortunate to get free advice from someone who is an expert, hence the instructional web pages. Those experts are not ashamed of the prices they quote, because for every 7 people who would not pay the prices, 3 people will pay.
After doing a 20 foot trailer for yourself (correctly), you seriously consider paying the $3000. Repeat after me... I would consider paying someone next time! For the record I myself would not pay $3000, because I do know people that will do it for less. They don't need to advertise, because there is always a job waiting.
Don't get my comments wrong... I am just providing food for thought.
One project waiting a turn... Anyone want to make some money? I live in Long Beach, CA. I have all the materials, the buffer, and cyclo polisher. So let's see, minus the materials, what would you charge?
