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Thread: DeWalt 443 Burned paint?
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04-28-06, 05:16 #1
DeWalt 443 Burned paint?
Hey guys, I was working this weekend and was using my trusty DW 443 on the paint. I have used it 3 times and have achieved awesome results. But after polishing the paint this time I felt the pad and the paint and both were warm after polishing. I am wondering that since it is a Random Orbit polisher can it still burn paint?
-Has anyone had this same problem?
-Is the size of the engine the culpret, or does the Porter Cable do the same thing?
Thanks for the help
Andrew"Treat every car as if it was your own"
-Every Detailer
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04-28-06, 05:30 #2Registered User
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Thats not a car polisher.
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04-28-06, 05:35 #3Registered User
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Quote: Originally Posted by cj99si
Neither is the porter cable. What's your point?
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04-28-06, 05:39 #4Registered User
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your burned paint.
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04-28-06, 05:40 #5Registered User
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Do you have any pics?
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04-28-06, 05:58 #6Registered User
My pads get pretty warm with my PC 7336 when doing heavy polishing.
www.scottwax.com
I test for Optimum, Clearkote, Meguiars
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04-28-06, 06:17 #7Registered User
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After polishing for a while, even da polishers tend to heat up. You can't really burn paint with a random orbit. You'd have to post pictures to really tell, but burning refers to polishing away all the clear (and more), not heating up the paint.
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04-28-06, 09:45 #8
As long as it's not noticeably hot (warm is OK), you should be fine. Generating heat is necessary to break down certain polishing abrasives, and I doubt that a RO is going to produce enough heat with 6-7" pads to do much incidental damage. Inspect the paint, and if there are no visible signs of damage, it should be fine.
Once you buff black, you never go back
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04-28-06, 11:02 #9
Yep, no visible signs of burn, it looks great, but was afraid that since the paint, pad, machine felt hot, that I have may have done some burning, that I couldn't tell. But, from what I hear it is normal. Just concerned you know, thanks for the help.
P.S. Anyone have the DW, and the PC? What do you think as to its aggressiveness and heat build up?
Thanks again,
andrew"Treat every car as if it was your own"
-Every Detailer
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04-29-06, 05:05 #10Registered User
The DW443 is an awesome machine, which is perfect for our purposes. A little warming is even beneficial.
Reformulated: cj, please elaborate more on your assumptions.
Last edited by Bence; 04-29-06 at 06:39.
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04-29-06, 05:27 #11
I really prefer the DW443....I like have just a little more speed too.
Ric
3Dog Garage
HOGtailing is my business
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04-29-06, 05:49 #12
Warm is fine. Really warn/kinda hot is OK. HOT isn't good but still doesn't mean you've burned the paint. Consider how hot you can get things with a rotary without doing any actual damage..so hot you can't hold your hand on the paint for long is often just a sign you need to back off a bit. For that matter, try holding your hand on a black car in AZ in July
When you actually *burn* paint you can clearly see the damage. Not gonna happen with a ~6.5" pad.
Porter Cable, Dewalt, Metabo, and numerous others- there are subtle differences between all these *random orbital sanders* but they're all fine for polishing paint. PC just gets the most attention.
IIRC the Dewalt has a slightly higher speed range, right? A thumbs-up from Bence sounds good to me.The most interesting man in all of Autopia Land. (<--I didn't enter that!)
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