Detailing Best Paint Ever! $3M Koenigsegg Jesko - Summary

Summary

A possible concise summary is:

The video is about the detailing process of a Koenigsegg Jesko, a prototype supercar that is designed to reach 300 miles per hour. The narrator explains the features and innovations of the car, such as the paint, the gearbox, the engine, the interior, and the key fob. He also shows how he cleans, polishes, and protects the car with various products and tools. He praises the quality and performance of the car and thanks the Koenigsegg team for the opportunity.

Facts

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1. The text is a transcript of a video about detailing the Koenigsegg Jesko, a prototype supercar that costs about 3 million dollars and can reach 300 miles per hour.
2. The car is named after Christian von Koenigsegg's father Jesco, who helped him start the company and was a jockey with green, white and gray racing colors.
3. The car has a V8 engine with 1600 horsepower on E85, a new nine-speed gearbox that can jump from any gear to any gear, rear wheel steering, and two turbochargers with a 20 liter carbon fiber air tank to reduce turbo lag.
4. The car has a redesigned monocoque interior with an infotainment system, nine inch touchscreen, apple carplay, haptic touch, and a 5-inch steering wheel mounted screen that stays horizontal as the wheel turns.
5. The car has 34 layers of paint, including 20 layers of base coat, one layer of white pearl, one layer of champagne, three layers of gray with blue and green spots, and nine layers of clear coat. The paint is very thick and resilient compared to other cars.
6. The detailing process involved cleaning the unclear coated carbon fiber wheels, rinsing and foaming the paint, using microfiber towels instead of wash mitts, polishing with a yellow foam pad and light polish, cleaning the engine and carbon fiber pieces with frothy, adding a layer of ammo skin and cream carnauba wax, cleaning the interior with lather and spit, and using a flexible squeegee on the windshield.
7. The car has a feature on the key fob that opens the engine, the front hood and both doors with a click of a show button. It also has a fishbowl windshield that gives a fighter jet or race car sensation.
8. The car was detailed in Manhattan Motor Cars detail bay in New York City and had to be moved through a tight elevator and pushed up a street in the wrong direction to get back to the showroom.