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09-03-08, 11:31
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#1 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
I'm still so new to the world of Autopia that I'm probably asking some very basic questions. I have a Cyclo that my brother has "given" to me on permanent loan. All I have is the Cyclo, the hook and loop pad holder, and 4 white pads that have really been used used up.
I have 2 cars I want work on:
'01 Jeep Wrangler in yellow -- The paint is badly swirled and scratched and all sorts of nasty things in the paint. I'm not too concerned about making this vehicle shine like show room condition. I take it down the trails too much to care too much about what the paint looks like. But it does give me a nice place to try new things without worry about damaging paint  .
'08 Cadillac CTS in Black -- The paint looks pretty good but there are some swirls that I caused prior to my finding Autopia
I would like to learn how to use the Cyclo to clean up the minor blemishes on the CTS and will use the Jeep as my experiment vehicle. I am currently on the Autogeek website and am getting ready to place an order but am not sure as to which polishes and pads I should buy. I've read through alot of posts in the forum and it still leaves me confused. Can you help me out of my confusion and let me know if I'm getting the right pads and if I'm using them as they are intended to be used?
This is what I'm thinking:
Pads -- - 6 White pads for finishing work. Applying sealers, etc...
- 6 Blue pads for removing the light swirls
- 6 orange pads for removing the heavy swirls on the Jeep (I just want to experiment)
For Polish I'm thinking:
1 Z Lack-Politur for removing the light swirls on the Cadillac ( 1Z Einszett Paint Polish Lack-Politur”
1Z Extra to remove the heavy swirls and blemishes on the jeep 1Z Einszett Extra Paint Cleaner Compound
I'll follow up the polish with Klasse AIO by hand and then TOTL Trade Secret also by hand.
So really I have 2 things I'm doing:
The Jeep:
- 2 Bucket Wash
- Clay bar
- Polish using 1Z Extra Orange pad
- Polish using 1Z Lack Politur with blue pad
- Klasse AIO
- TOTL Trade Secret
The cadillac:
- 2 Bucket Wash
- Clay bar
- Polish using 1Z Lack Politur with blue pad
- Klasse AIO
- TOTL Trade Secret
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09-04-08, 10:34
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#2 (permalink)
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Practical Perfectionist
Accumulator is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 24,898
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Quote:
Originally Posted by simplybao
I'm still so new to the world of Autopia that I'm probably asking some very basic questions. I have a Cyclo that my brother has "given" to me on permanent loan. All I have is the Cyclo, the hook and loop pad holder, and 4 white pads that have really been used used up... I am currently on the Autogeek website and am getting ready to place an order but am not sure as to which polishes and pads I should buy...
Can you help me out of my confusion and let me know if I'm getting the right pads and if I'm using them as they are intended to be used?
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LONG time Cyclo user here, and also a big fan of 1Z polishes. Here's my $0.02:
Quote:
Pads --- 6 White pads for finishing work. Applying sealers, etc...
- 6 Blue pads for removing the light swirls
- 6 orange pads for removing the heavy swirls on the Jeep (I just want to experiment)
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You're gonna need some green pads and IMO fewer of the white ones.
For the heavy marring on the Jeep, you might oughta look into the wool Cyclo pads (available from Cyclo Toolmakers if AutoGeek doesn't have them).
I'd get the Pasta Intensiv instead of the Extra. The Pasta Intensiv works very well by Cyclo, but (like the Extra), requires a follow up with the milder Paint Polish (AKA Lack-Politur).
Use Pasta Intensiv/orange, then Pasta Intensiv/green, then Paint Polish/green.
I dunno if the Paint Polish will give the finest finish possible. I often see a slight improvement by following it with something like their Metallic Polish with Wax (with a blue or white pad).
Quote:
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I'll follow up the polish with Klasse AIO by hand and then TOTL Trade Secret also by hand.
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OOPS, bad idea IMO. The KAIO will clean off the wax/etc. that the 1Z polishes leave behind, and I wouldn't do that. IMO they're good stuff, at least as nice as what the KAIO will leave behind in their place. So I'd strongly encourage you to skip the KAIO.
I just wax over top of what the 1Z polishes leave behind.
(Note that the Pasta Intensiv doesn't leave wax behind, but it always gets followed by something milder anyhow).
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09-04-08, 11:25
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#3 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Accumulator, thanks for your reply to both my newbie posts.....
You said:
Quote:
I'd get the Pasta Intensiv instead of the Extra. The Pasta Intensiv works very well by Cyclo, but (like the Extra), requires a follow up with the milder Paint Polish (AKA Lack-Politur).
Use Pasta Intensiv/orange, then Pasta Intensiv/green, then Paint Polish/green.
I dunno if the Paint Polish will give the finest finish possible. I often see a slight improvement by following it with something like their Metallic Polish with Wax (with a blue or white pad).
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So this is the process you'd use on the Jeep?
What about the Cadillac that only needs a little bit of help?
You said to go with 1Z PP/green and follow it up with Collinite (per my other post). I'll skip the KAIO per your advice. Or should I add another step in there?
So for my order, I'll go:
6 orange
6 green
2 white
1Z PP
1Z Pasta Intesiv
Collinite 885
Autopia is getting expensive for me to read and follow. In 6 weeks, I've spent close to $400 on supplies -- not including this order.
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09-04-08, 11:47
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#4 (permalink)
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Practical Perfectionist
Accumulator is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 24,898
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Quote:
Originally Posted by simplybao
So this is the process you'd use on the Jeep?
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Yeah, the multi-step starting with the Pasta Intensiv/orange.
Work the Pasta Intensiv a good long time but not until it's completely dry. Don't use too much product and don't press hard at the beginning (before the abrasives have broken down any).
Quote:
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What about the Cadillac that only needs a little bit of help?
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I haven't worked on a Cadillac since forever, so I'm not sure how hard/soft it'll be. I'd expect the 1Z PP to do OK unless the marring is worse than you think (then try the Pasta Intensiv/green).
Quote:
You said to go with 1Z PP/green and follow it up with Collinite (per my other post). I'll skip the KAIO per your advice. Or should I add another step in there?
So for my order, I'll go:
6 orange
6 green
2 white
1Z PP
1Z Pasta Intesiv
Collinite 885
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If you think you want/need another step, I'd get some 1Z Metallic Polish with Wax to use for a final polish. On some paints I really see a difference, on others I don't. It'd be a better choice (considering what you're doing here) than the KAIO.
Quote:
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Autopia is getting expensive for me to read and follow. In 6 weeks, I've spent close to $400 on supplies -- not including this order.
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The good news is that if you wash properly (easier said than done though ) you won't have to polish again for a long time so the 1z stuff will last a long time.
Just *DON'T USE TOO MUCH PRODUCT*. Use only enough polish to keep the pads lubricated, more is *not* better.
The Collinite lasts a long, long time too and should be applied very thin (a can oughta last for many years). It should hardly take any wax at all to do both vehicles.
So you should be all set for a good long while if you can resist the temptation to try every product that sounds interesting.
About the only additional thing I think you oughta consider is some kind of QD to use when drying the vehicle off. You get most of the water off, spritz on the QD, and then finish drying. This provides a little protective lubrication and, if you use the right QD, it'll give your wax a tiny little boost. I like FK425 or Griot's SpeedShine, but others love AquaWax and various others.
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09-04-08, 12:09
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#5 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Thanks for the really quick reply. Yep, I figured that after I did this, I wouldn't have to polish for a long time. I'm just going to do the 1Z PP/blue and the collinte on the caddy and see how it works out. If 1Z PP/blue doesn't work, I'lll try the 1z Pasta Intesive/blue then 1Z PP/blue, then collinte.
I'll have to resist the urge to buy more stuff just to try it...LOL. I do have a QD, I am using Mother's but am going to switch to Adam's QD.
I usually dry the entire car, blow all the water from the cracks and crevices, and then spray some QD and wipe it off. So far, the Mother's has been ok. Even with my Detailer's Domain Uber microfiber towels, I have to spray it on, wipe it off, then use a dry towel to buff it. I want something easier to use.
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09-04-08, 01:04
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#6 (permalink)
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Practical Perfectionist
Accumulator is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 24,898
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Quote:
Originally Posted by simplybao
.. I'm just going to do the 1Z PP/blue and the collinte on the caddy and see how it works out. If 1Z PP/blue doesn't work, I'lll try the 1z Pasta Intesive/blue then 1Z PP/blue, then collinte...
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I wouldn't try the Pasta Intensiv with the blue pads, IMO it requires something more porous like the green ones. Using the wrong pad with Pasta Intensiv could result in some pretty nasty marring, so don't try to mix this aggressive product with such a mild pad.
FWIW, I use the green pads most often by *far*.
Quote:
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I usually dry the entire car, blow all the water from the cracks and crevices, and then spray some QD and wipe it off. So far, the Mother's has been ok. Even with my Detailer's Domain Uber microfiber towels, I have to spray it on, wipe it off, then use a dry towel to buff it. I want something easier to use.
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Well, I dunno if you're gonna get it much easier than that 
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09-04-08, 01:05
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#7 (permalink)
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Registered User
Mark77 is offline
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Helsinki, Finland
Posts: 836
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Well as I guessed when I saw the post, Accumulator already gave the perfect answers
I myself got the Edge system and I have found my self using the green pads the most(like Accumulator said, you will need those a lot more than the white ones). I have never used the 1Z products but the green pads work great with everything from Poli Seal to SSR 2,5 or Megs #83.
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09-04-08, 01:37
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#8 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Quote:
Originally Posted by Accumulator
I wouldn't try the Pasta Intensiv with the blue pads, IMO it requires something more porous like the green ones. Using the wrong pad with Pasta Intensiv could result in some pretty nasty marring, so don't try to mix this aggressive product with such a mild pad.
FWIW, I use the green pads most often by *far*.
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DOH!, I meant green pads and not the blue.
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09-04-08, 03:26
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#9 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Well, I've placed my order, let's see if I can make a difference in my finish
I ordered:
- 2 white pads
- 6 Orange
- 6 green
- Collinite 885
- 1Z PP
- 1Z Pasta Intensiv
- Pro Blend Bottle Proportioner (I have a bunch of 1 gallon bottles and I think this will be awesome. I hope if works)
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09-05-08, 09:30
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#10 (permalink)
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Practical Perfectionist
Accumulator is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 24,898
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
simplybao- OK, that should be a good batch of stuff. The 1Z stuff seems pretty straightforward so I don't think you'll have any problems.
Just remember to not press hard with the Pasta Intensiv until it's broken down a bit and don't use too much product (and product).
If you get a chance, post something about how it goes. In the unlikely event that something doesn't go smoothly, I'd a) like to know about it so I can tweak my advice and b) like to try to help sort it out. But I really don't expect you to have problems 
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09-05-08, 11:36
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#11 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
Thanks for the advice. Since I've never done this before, I didn't know that I needed to apply pressure at all. I thought I just had to use the weight of the polisher. I'm going to experiment on the Jeep first and see what happens. If I mess up the paint on it, then no harm no foul since the paint looks like crap anyway...LOL. It's almost like having a piece of a car part from a junk yard to practice on.
If I weren't just practicing, I would not bother with the Jeep. I'd just put a layer of collinite on it and call it a day. As it stands now, all I have on it is some cheap Meguire's Paste wax.
I'll post up my results. It's unlikely that I'll be able to do it for a couple of weeks, but I'll post up my results on the main board.
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09-05-08, 12:56
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#12 (permalink)
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Registered User
simplybao is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 89
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Re: Newbie with a cyclo, need help with choosing pads and polish
By the way, how long do I work the polish? Until it's dry or until it hazes?
So this is what I was planning:
I'll have a water bottle that I'll spritz the pads with. I'll do this first to get the pads a little moist.
I'll apply the polish to the pads (just a little bit, I've watched a bunch of videos on this) and then work it around in a 2' x 2' area, then turn the cyclo on.
I'll work it around in an up and down and around motion until I see hazing and then turn off the cyclo, then remove polish. That's it right? Am I right in assuming that I don't go until it's dry?
I'm used to using very little product. I have KAIO and I've used it and I know that very very very little goes a long long way. I gather 1Z is the same way?
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