JustJesus
New member
This post is weird for me. On some level, I fell like a complete newb for asking. But, on another level, I need to know the WHY aspect.
I've been detailing for just over a year, and have corrected a handful of cars. I've always gotten the results I was looking for and have left every single owner more than happy with those results.
The question I have is geared more toward part of the process of paint correction. I've seen, and continue to see, suggestions to new guys looking to polish that they should buy several pads for each step of the correction process. I've seen 4-6 pads (each type) about being average for a car. I *do* understand certain aspects of why you want multiple pads, i.e., longer pad life, cooling off period, cleaner pads, etc. I also understand that you want to clean on the fly, to clean off product and paint residue.
For those using more than two pads, WHY are you using more than two?
To me, it seems a little excessive. Here's how I'm understanding it: you start with a clean pad. You prime the pad. You then do your 3-4 drops of product. Polish a section. Wipe off the panel. Clean on the fly. Repeat the process (til satisfied with results). THEN, move onto a new section. Get a new pad. Prime the pad. 3-4 drops of product....and so on and so on. It seems like you're using *more* product this way by having to prime each new pad.
If one simply cleaned on the fly, you'd have an alread-primed pad and move on.
I tend to use two pads. Cuz of heat. Once I've used a pad for a section pass, I remove it and put it aside to let it cool off while I work a panel with a different pad. Then clean on the fly and repeat that process.
I know one argument that will surely pop up is that you extend your pad life by having several pads. I believe this is true to a point. Sort of like having two cars. You switch off cars, say evenly, to make this simple. If one car has a shelf life of 200k miles, and you expect it to last 10 years, and it's the same with the other, by switching off cars you will have each car last 20 years. Yes, it lasted "longer" but from a different perspective, it still only lasts 200k miles. The thing is now you have spent twice as much to get the second car. In the end, it seems like a wash to me. I tried having a basic example to get my point across, but not sure if it was clear.
Anyway, I have mad respect for several Autopians, and will welcome any feedback, suggestions, comments, etc. I'm just looking to learn, and if I can be more efficient in the process, then I'm all for it.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
I've been detailing for just over a year, and have corrected a handful of cars. I've always gotten the results I was looking for and have left every single owner more than happy with those results.
The question I have is geared more toward part of the process of paint correction. I've seen, and continue to see, suggestions to new guys looking to polish that they should buy several pads for each step of the correction process. I've seen 4-6 pads (each type) about being average for a car. I *do* understand certain aspects of why you want multiple pads, i.e., longer pad life, cooling off period, cleaner pads, etc. I also understand that you want to clean on the fly, to clean off product and paint residue.
For those using more than two pads, WHY are you using more than two?
To me, it seems a little excessive. Here's how I'm understanding it: you start with a clean pad. You prime the pad. You then do your 3-4 drops of product. Polish a section. Wipe off the panel. Clean on the fly. Repeat the process (til satisfied with results). THEN, move onto a new section. Get a new pad. Prime the pad. 3-4 drops of product....and so on and so on. It seems like you're using *more* product this way by having to prime each new pad.
If one simply cleaned on the fly, you'd have an alread-primed pad and move on.
I tend to use two pads. Cuz of heat. Once I've used a pad for a section pass, I remove it and put it aside to let it cool off while I work a panel with a different pad. Then clean on the fly and repeat that process.
I know one argument that will surely pop up is that you extend your pad life by having several pads. I believe this is true to a point. Sort of like having two cars. You switch off cars, say evenly, to make this simple. If one car has a shelf life of 200k miles, and you expect it to last 10 years, and it's the same with the other, by switching off cars you will have each car last 20 years. Yes, it lasted "longer" but from a different perspective, it still only lasts 200k miles. The thing is now you have spent twice as much to get the second car. In the end, it seems like a wash to me. I tried having a basic example to get my point across, but not sure if it was clear.
Anyway, I have mad respect for several Autopians, and will welcome any feedback, suggestions, comments, etc. I'm just looking to learn, and if I can be more efficient in the process, then I'm all for it.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.