DannyZZ- Yeah, with most any product I can think of..if it dries on the paint before you buff it off, it oughta be applied VERY thin. Rare exception might be when asking some AIO (including SRP I guess..) to do some really heavy lifting, especially with regard to oxidation. THEN I can see using plenty, but for anything remotely normal, use as little as you can while ensuring a uniform application. Hey, you can always add more to the pad after doing some small area (easy to be careful/meticulous when working those small areas too).
Yeah, you can use FK1000P on painted trim.
Example: The black inserts in my `93 Audi`s bumpercovers LOOK like they`re rubber or somesuch, but they`re just a pebble-grained textured plastic that`s painted black, while the rest of the bumpercover is the same plastic only SMOOTH and painted blue. I FK1000P the whole bumpercover, just remembering to be careful to do the THIN thing so I don`t end up with (excess) dried residue in the textured part. And I do more of a wipe-on-wipe-off application instead of letting it flash off per usual (I *always* do this on textured stuff of any kind). I can easily imagine somebody botching it up with too much product, but not a problem for me.
That "excess product residue stuck in a deep texture" is the only real issue I cant think people oughta watch out for. On that same Audi, I use Collinoite 845 on the *REALLY* rough-textured gravel-guarded underneath areas...just too deep a texture for any paste-product IMO.
Surly- Gee, I resemble that remark, huh?
Sure hope I didn`t give you a bum steer, but I doubt that. Just remember to do the thin *thin* *THIN* application and keep it off the trim..oughta go fine.
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