does polishing remove clearcote?

Yes any polishing you do removes a very minute amount of clear coat. Not to worry though. Unless your doing very heavy polishing you should fear about going through the CC to the primer.



Greg
 
It depends lol. There are 2 types of polishes. Chemical (or filler) and abrasive. Filler polishes just fill in the scratches and swirls, they dont slove the problem reeally they just hide it. Abrasive polishes on the other hand cut down the clear and make it smooth So you are taking very tiny amounts of clear off with each pass. It also depends on thebad. A cutting pad wil take of clear becase thats what its designed to do, however if you use a finishing pad it should.
 
It depends lol. There are 2 types of polishes. Chemical (or filler) and abrasive. Filler polishes just fill in the scratches and swirls, they dont slove the problem reeally they just hide it. Abrasive polishes on the other hand cut down the clear and make it smooth So you are taking very tiny amounts of clear off with each pass. It also depends on thebad. A cutting pad wil take of clear becase thats what its designed to do, however if you use a finishing pad it should.
 
thanks for the replys .i just bought an of f350 and polished it with a green pad then went to blue .i clayed it before i did all of this .it looks great but if the sun hite it end you ook really close you can see little micro scraches very little . other then that it looks great. as picky as i am im going to leave it the way it is . i used a dual head polisher when i did all of this .what would i have to do to make it totoly flaw less ?high speed polisher. the trucks so new i hate to go crazy on it
 
trhland- First I'd determine if the little scratches are old ones that didn't get removed (need a more aggressive approach) or new ones from what you did last (need a *less* aggressive approach).



The good news is that since the truck is new it probably hasn't been polished much yet, so the clear is nice and thick, so you can afford to work it some more.



But something to consider: do you have your wash/dry regimen down pat so that once you *get* it perfect, you can *keep* it perfect? I'm a fanatic about wash technique, so that's what always comes to mind...
 
Accumulator said:
trhland- First I'd determine if the little scratches are old ones that didn't get removed (need a more aggressive approach) or new ones from what you did last (need a *less* aggressive approach).



The good news is that since the truck is new it probably hasn't been polished much yet, so the clear is nice and thick, so you can afford to work it some more.



But something to consider: do you have your wash/dry regimen down pat so that once you *get* it perfect, you can *keep* it perfect? I'm a fanatic about wash technique, so that's what always comes to mind...

thanks accumulater for the reply. ya i aways rinse the truck first then wash it and dry it with always micro towels. and when i do the rims and tires i always use and extra bucket and brush.
 
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