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Had my first go around with a rotary today, practicing on my beater truck. Question I have is, does it take more polish initially than a RO would need? Pad seemed grabby until I used what I would consider a lot of polish.
If the product gets heated up to much or you work it too long it will become grabby from my experience on the rotary. Once you get it figured out the rotary will be the smoothest tool you will ever use.
I love using mine. Getting skilled in rotary use will definitely be beneficial in the long run. Glad to see you tackling it and not afraid to try!
JBM -
Congrats on taking the challenge !
What pad were you using, what size pad, what product were you using, were you inside or outside in the sun, did you prime the pad first, did you spray some liquid like a pad conditioner on the pad first? What year and make of vehicle and color ?
I always work inside, always use 5-1/4" pads, always spray a little pad conditioner on the foam first to get it a little moist, then apply a enough product (compound or polish) to get a thin layer about all around the pad but not every square inch, place the pad on the panel and move it around to spread it across both foam and panel, and then start off the Makita at slow start 600 rpm and spread it around..
It should move easily and you have to look at the work and decide how far you want this thin layer to go before its too far..
Remember to keep the entire pad flat on the surface and if you have to adjust for rounded areas, dips, curves, etc, use your arms to absorb the change and try keeping the pad flat as much as possible..
You know how shock absorbers move up and down over imperfections in the road that move the wheels up and down, and they work hard to keep the tires flat on the road surface ? That is what you want your arms to be like when going over changes in the surface..
Dan F
JBM -
Congrats on taking the challenge !
What pad were you using, what size pad, what product were you using, were you inside or outside in the sun, did you prime the pad first, did you spray some liquid like a pad conditioner on the pad first? What year and make of vehicle and color ?
Thanks,
I was using a tangerine hydro-tech pad. It was on a 03` f250 and it was white, so no buffer trails!
I did one half the truck with shine supply classic cut and it was grabby until I primed the pad (3 nickle sized drops werent enough), then was nice and smooth. I switched over to Adapt on the other half of the truck and the pad was super grabby. I was hesitant to overload the pad with Adapt because it balls up on my DA when I do this, so I switched back to the classic cut.
I was working outside, but it was super cloudy and cool, but slightly humid.
Stokgds:
Since you are the Autopian resident rotary maestro-extraordinaire, my questions are:
1) What are the manufacturer`s compounds and polishes that YOU prefer for a rotary and why?
(I assume from your above comments that you have not used or do not prefer 3D/HD compounds and polishes)
2) Have you used other rotaries other than the Makita you mentioned above? Seems to me the Makita becomes the standard-defacto rotary for those who become skilled and experienced in using rotaries.
For those of you Autopians still on the fence about buying and using a rotary or the newer long-throw dual-action (LT-DA) polishers please see:
http://www.autopia.org/forums/machi...otary-polishers-saga-continues.html?highlight=