How hard is SS green usually?

efnfast

New member
Probably varies manufacturer to manufacturer, but typically SS black is soooooo soft it isn't even funny, and SS white is hard as nails.



Any idea about SS green?



I did a bit of work on my John Deere today (SS green) and ended up using SIP+PFW+3401. Even on speed 6 I barely made a dent - took multiple passes, and even then it wasn't perfect. Also, I noticed I barely got any paint transfer on my pads. It was there, but not much.
 
it would vary manufacturer to manufacturer, but IMHO Ford SS Green is a medium/hard paint. Not rock hard, but not soft like typical ford paint.



I have a very limited experience with SS Green, but what was on a mustang I delt with last year sometime was much harder than normal clear coated paint I deal with on other Ford cars.
 
efnfast- I can't quite remember the details but the paint used by John Deere is different from normal automotive ss. It's probably an epoxy or something like Imron but I dunno for sure.



[Insert "so you're polishing your John Deere, huh?" comments here...]
 
Accumulator said:
efnfast- I can't quite remember the details but the paint used by John Deere is different from normal automotive ss. It's probably an epoxy or something like Imron but I dunno for sure.



[Insert "so you're polishing your John Deere, huh?" comments here...]



Don't really know much about Imron - would that be fairly hard?



And yes, I'm re-polishing it :D



At the beginning of the year I hit it with my cyclo and got out 70% of the abuse on it (16yrs of hitting cows, fences, trees, oxidization, etc....). Since I've gotten better with my Flex I wanted to give it a try, and I was surprised at how much I had to pound it to get it to 95% (and despite how hard I was pounding, I got virtually no paint transfer)



Very frustrating because what I found worked well (after all that least agressive method BS, lol) was



3401+PFW+SIP at speed 6. This got rid of most of the RIDs, but left massive wool swirls behind - very unusual because most times I've used PFW pad+SIP it finished out LSP ready.....on the JD it performed like a wool pad - defect removal, but swirls everywhere



3401+white+106 at speed 6 removed the swirls from the PFW



Then wax.





This taken taken at the beginning of the year. As you can see, 'easy' to make tractor shineeeeee



Before 16yrs of abuse

trac2.jpg


trac4.jpg




After

trac13.jpg


trac11.jpg




(I should have taken some pictures yesterday of it looking 95% rather than 70%, but didn't get around to it)
 
Heh heh, well...you sure do have it looking good!



Guess the paint on it is hard.



FWIW, Imron was one of the first old-school "super durable" paints and it was/is generally tough stuff to correct.
 
That makes sense - I'm just glad then automotive SSs arn't like this. (although I almost always never do them, unless it's for a friend)



I did a black supra, and after 1 pass my pad was pure black. Do 1 pass on the JD and I can't see any green. Several passes later I think I see a hint of it...maybe....I don't relaly know at this point, lol.



The most frustrating part though is that it's hard to correct, BUT it mars so bloody easily - if you've got just a very fine layer of dust and your hand touches it for a split second, bam, instant marring that needs a wool pad to remove.



I see the new ones (this one is 16yrs old) in stores are clearcoated.....that would make my life so much easier, hah!
 
Back
Top