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Sorting Out Scratches Without Ruining Your Paint

Red dust, creek crossings, and corrugated roads don't just test your 4WD—they test your cleaning game. Most people get it wrong.

Don't let a stray branch or a bit of red dust ruin your pride and joy. Here is how to figure out if a scratch is fixable at home and the best way to tackle it in the Aussie heat.

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Sarah Chen Interior & Leather Specialist
| Updated: 27 February 2026
Sorting Out Scratches Without Ruining Your Paint

Aussie Conditions

Aussie red dust is iron-rich and bonds to paint. A regular rinse won't cut it—you need proper pre-wash and pH-neutral soap to avoid scratching.
Quick Summary

Look, we've all been there. You come back from a weekend in the bush or a trip to the beach and find a fresh nasty mark on the door. This guide is for anyone who wants to fix those light scratches and bush pinstripes without spending a fortune at a panel shop. I'll show you what actually works and what is just a waste of your Saturday arvo.

01

The Reality of Scratches

Right, so you've copped a scratch. Before you panic and head to the servo for one of those dodgy 'magic' pens, let's get real. Aussie conditions are brutal. Between the 40 degree heat baking your clear coat and that abrasive red dust, your paint is under constant assault. I've spent 15 years fixing 'quick fixes' that went wrong, so let's do this properly. Most light scratches are just in the clear coat and can be sorted with a bit of elbow grease and the right gear.

The Fingernail Test

This is the first thing I do when a customer brings me a car. Run your fingernail gently across the scratch. If your nail catches in the groove, it's too deep for a simple polish. You're looking at touch-up paint or a pro job then. If it doesn't catch? Beautiful. You can likely buff that right out. I learned this the hard way on a black Commodore years ago, spent three hours polishing a scratch that was through to the primer. Total waste of time.

Never Work in the Sun

Seriously, don't even think about it. If the panels are hot to the touch, you're going to have a shocker. The polish will dry almost instantly and you'll end up marring the paint. Wait until the arvo when the sun's gone down or get it under a carport. My go-to for Aussie summers is working early morning before the heat properly kicks in. Your products will actually behave themselves that way.

Clean Twice, Polish Once

If you've been out in the dust, you need to be clinical with your cleaning. Even a tiny bit of red dust trapped in your applicator pad is basically liquid sandpaper. Give the area a proper wash, then use a clay bar. I reckon Bowden's Own Fine Clay Bar is the best for this, it gets the grit out without being too aggressive. If you skip this, you'll just be grinding dirt into your clear coat and making it ten times worse.

Pick the Right Compound

Don't go straight for the heavy-duty rubbing compound unless it's a shocker. Start with a light finishing polish like Meguiar's Ultimate Polish. It's better to take two or three passes with something gentle than to go too hard and burn through your clear coat. I once saw a mate try to fix a scratch on his missus' car using toothpaste because he read it online. Don't do that. It's rubbish and it's way too abrasive.
02

The 'No-Drama' Scratch Kit

What You'll Need

0/5
Duo of Microfibre Cloths — One for applying, one for buffing off. Keep them clean!
Quality Polish — Something like Meguiar's or Autoglym Super Resin Polish.
Foam Applicator Pad — Easier to control than a rag.
Clay Bar and Lube — To get that stubborn red dust out first.
Isopropyl Alcohol (IPA) — To wipe the area down and see if the scratch is actually gone or just hidden.

Watch Out

Do not use a high-speed rotary buffer if you don't know what you're doing. You will burn the paint on the edges faster than a snag on a hot barbie. Also, stay away from 'As Seen on TV' scratch repair kits. Most of them are just cheap oils that fill the scratch temporarily until the next wash. Absolute waste of money.
03

Quick Questions

Can I use WD-40 on a scratch?
Nah, don't bother. It's an old wives' tale. It just coats the scratch in oil so it disappears for five minutes. As soon as you wash the car or it rains, the scratch is back. Use a real polish.
What about those 'bush pinstripes' from narrow tracks?
If they're light, a good dual-action polisher and a medium compound will clear them right up. If you've gone deep into the paint on a sharp branch, you might need a pro to look at it.
Does wax remove scratches?
Technically, no. Wax is a protectant. It might hide very fine swirls, but it doesn't remove the damage. You need a polish (which is an abrasive) to actually level the paint and get rid of the mark.
04

Final Word

At the end of the day, scratches happen, especially if you actually use your rig for what it was built for. Take it slow, keep everything clean, and don't work in the midday sun. If you follow those steps, she'll be right. Cheers!

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