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Work &
Finance > Work At Home
Auto Cream Puff Service
How To Make $50.00 A Day Hiring Two
Jobless Persons From The Unemployment Office.
This is the auto cream puff service. You will find a small
classified ad will get business for this one, and all you
do is provide a place to work, and put half the money in
the bank. Since you will be making your clients several
hundred dollars richer, it is not hard to get business!
People are selling used cars every day. Many of them could
make a lot more from the sales if they spend some money to
have the car cleaned up.
In this report you will find a system for
doing this. You can hire common labor from the
unemployment office to do the work, all you have to do is
find the customers. You can do this by running ads in the
paper offering the service at whatever price the traffic
will bear. The only time you have any overhead is when you
have a cash customer. Many buyers who haggle long and hard
to get a good deal on a new car lose hundreds of dollars
by not knowing how to sell their old car. The mileage, and
condition of the body - inside and out - often can make a
difference of several hundred dollars. Whether you sell it
yourself or trade it. Most experts agree that the
better the car looks, the more money it's going to be
worth.
A couple of days of hard work (or one REAL
hard day) and less then $25.00 in supplies can often make
a difference in hundreds of dollars, turning a below
average, or average car into a "cream puff"
worth top dollar. The owner's manual should be consulted
for special cleaning requirements. Another good source of
information is the book "Car Owning Made
Easier", available for 50 cents from the Public
Relations Department, Ford Parts and Services, 1 Park Lane
Blvd., Dearborn, MI 48126. The trick is to get the car
looking "good as new", starting with the
outside. For openers, the cars should get a good bath,
using a lot of soap and water. It's a good idea whenever
you wash your car to force lots of
water down the vents in front of the windshield to wash
the salt out of that passage. The water usually runs out
of the rocker-panels - the section under the door frame -
where accumulated salts often causes rust. After the car
is cleaned, inspect the body carefully, noting all dents,
rust spots and scratches.
If you have a dent that looks like an inverted watermelon,
"Car Owning Made Easier" suggests the following
remedy: Deflate a football and push it, with an air hose
attached, behind the dent. Inflate the football slowly and
watch the dent pop out. Most of the time, it's a near
perfect repair. If the dent is not in a place where this
method works, gently tapping with a rubber headed mallet
will
often put out a dent.
The next step is to take care of the rust.
Be sure to look around the trim of the car, and around
then rocker-panels under the door frame. If you find any
rust, you should fix it immediately even if you don't plan
to sell the car. If the rust has made a hole in the metal,
you will need a patch kit (you can get one for a few
dollars) which contains its own instructions for making
the repair. (Prices in this article are average ones for
products at automotive stores. All are readily available.)
After any holes have been repaired, the body putty should
be sanded so it is smooth and blends with the rest of the
body. All rust spots should be
sanded with extra fine sand paper (30 cents) until the
rust is gone and the metal is shiny. Then take touchup
paint ($1.89) and lightly paint the areas you have sanded.
Be sure to mask off the surrounding areas if you use a
spray.
Whether you use a spray or small brush, be sure to apply a
very thin layer.
While the paint is drying, take care of
the rest of the exterior. The appearance of old tires can
be improved when painted with tire black ($1.89), a
special paint that doesn't dry out the rubber. There's
paint for the whitewall section of the tire too, cost -
$1.95. Another important part of the exterior appearance
is the wheel covers. If any are missing or badly damaged,
you can get replacements from the local junkyard for
between $2 to $5 (fancy ones can cost as much as $10.00).
Metal wheels should be cleaned with a magnesium or
aluminum cleaner ($2.67) and a stiff brush.
All metal parts of the car not covered by
paint should be cleaned. Metal or chrome cleaner (69
cents) should be used to polish mirrors, side moldings,
wheel covers, bumpers, antennas, and all other exterior
metal. If there is a lot of rust on the bumpers that won't
come off with metal cleaner, steel wool will usually take
it off, but it may pit the bumpers. Finally, all glass and
plastic on the outside should be cleaned with a glass
polish. All lights should be checked and broken lenses and
burned out bulbs replaced. If the car is more than year
old, it should get a thorough cleaning with rubbing
compound or similar substance (99 cents). These special
cleaners have a very mild abrasive which removes a minute
top layer of paint and restores the original shine.
After rubbing the alcohol compound, the
car should get a good waxing ($1.25). If the car is less
than a year old a good car cleaner wax which combines the
cleaning and waxing steps may be used. If the car has a
vinyl top, it should be cleaned with a vinyl cleaner
($1.35). The interior of the car should be good and clean
too. The first step is to clean all the instruments, the
dashboard, and the other non-fabric parts inside the car.
Because the covers over some of the instruments are
plastic, strong solvents should be avoided as they could
make the plastic cloudy. An ideal cleaner for the inside,
"Car Owning Made Easier" says, is one part of
vinegar to 20 parts water. Use a pipe cleaner on the
hard-to-get-at places like push buttons on the radio or
the heating controls. Fabric upholstery should get a good
shampoo ($1.59) and tears should be sewn by using regular
sewing supplies. Vinyl should be brightened with vinyl
cleaner and leather should be get a saddle soaping. If
either the vinyl or leather has nicks in it, shoe polish
can often be used to cover them up.
The car, including the trunk, should get a
thorough vacuuming and carpets should be cleaned if they
are spotted and dirty. If you have owned the car for more
than two years, the foot pedals may be worn. New brake and
clutch rubber pads cost approximately $3 each, while the
accelerator pedal costs about $8, but they can increase
the value of the car by adding "cream puff" look
to the inside. Lastly, the engine should look good.
Cleaning the engine can be a simple matter with a special
cleaner ($1.59) which removes the grease, oil and other
dirt that makes your engine look bad!
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