HELP I messed it up :-/

papi_jay said:
Blue Original Dawn is the best because it is the only dish soap KNOWN to not contain abrasives . Other dish soaps formula changes I guess .. ?

Thing is 3m rubbing compound always leaves swirls or holograms . It should be followed up with 3m Machine Glaze Imperial or Perfect-It III





I dunno, there are many liquid dish soaps that don't have abrasives (I've used a lot of different ones on soft materials like plastic lenses); IMO most people use Dawn because of it's known grease cutting ability, which translates into wax cutting ability too. I'd rather use a dish soap for this than clay, but IMO going to the store for the rubbing alcohol won't take as long as trying to remove the LSP with a less effective method.



3M makes a *lot* of different rubbing compounds, and the milder ones I've used (PI-II FCRC 39002 and PI-III RC 05933) don't necessarily leave any holograms/swirls/etc. But yeah, a follow-up with a milder machine (e.g., Cyclo/PC) and/or a milder product like the Machine Glaze is always a good idea.
 
papi_jay said:
Blue Original Dawn is the best because it is the only dish soap KNOWN to not contain abrasives . Other dish soaps formula changes I guess .. ?

Thing is 3m rubbing compound always leaves swirls or holograms . It should be followed up with 3m Machine Glaze Imperial or Perfect-It III





I dunno, there are many liquid dish soaps that don't have abrasives (I've used a lot of different ones on soft materials like plastic lenses); IMO most people use Dawn because of it's known grease cutting ability, which translates into wax cutting ability too. I'd rather use a dish soap for this than clay, but IMO going to the store for the rubbing alcohol won't take as long as trying to remove the LSP with a less effective method.



3M makes a *lot* of different rubbing compounds, and the milder ones I've used (PI-II FCRC 39002 and PI-III RC 05933) don't necessarily leave any holograms/swirls/etc. But yeah, a follow-up with a milder machine (e.g., Cyclo/PC) and/or a milder product like the Machine Glaze is always a good idea.
 
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