HomicidalSloth
New member
Arggg, at this point I just feel like throwing the PC and all of my polishes in the back of my car and just driving it all off of a cliff. :wall
I've been trying to polish out some faint scratchs/swirl marks in my paint. These marks are so faint you can only see them in direct light, and it has to be the absoloutly perfect angle. I've tried all night on the things, and I think I'm going to end up eating through my clear coat or something if I don't stop and ask for advice. I got most of the swirls out, but there are these faint horizonal scratchs that I can only see at the right angle using light from my flash light, they look rainbow colored top-to-bottom or something? Really weird.
Out of frustration, here's what I just tried on about a 12" by 8" section of my quarter panel: PC7424, yellow Sonus "cutting" (not sure if it's technically a cutting pad, it's the most agressive one in the sonus kit) pad with SSR3, PC set on speed 6. I moved at a rate of about 1/4" per second, putting quite a bit of pressure on the PC (enough to where it just barely begins to bog). After about 3 passes like this, I lower the speed to 4 and go over it with about 3 more passes, at a slightly quicker movement of the buffer.
Anyway, next I did SSR2.5 with the yellow pad, same technique (speed 6 followed by 4). Then SSR2.5 with the white (SFX-2) sonus pad, and then SFX-2 polish with the white (SFX-2) sonus pad (both using the same technique). Then PBW's professional polish, white pad, 3.5 speed.
I VERY lightly buffed with a microfiber from poorboy's world, then used meg's quick detailer and VERY light pressure on my PBW microfiber to remove the final residue and to dry the panel.
Stepped back to examine my work, there are still those ugly scratchs that I can see with my flashlight from an exact angle. The angle has to be so precice that I can't even see all of the faint scratchs from the same angle on that 12" long section.
I really can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. I seem to have pretty good products, so I'm sure it's simply user error... But I've read so much online I really don't know what I could be doing wrong. Any help / advice / ideas are appreciated.
edit: I know my polishing isn't just doing nothing, because I DO get hologramming if I really attack it with SSR3 and the yellow pad. But once I remove the hologramming with a milder polish, the scratchs/swirl marks/whatever is ALWAYS still there, so I've got not clue...
I've been trying to polish out some faint scratchs/swirl marks in my paint. These marks are so faint you can only see them in direct light, and it has to be the absoloutly perfect angle. I've tried all night on the things, and I think I'm going to end up eating through my clear coat or something if I don't stop and ask for advice. I got most of the swirls out, but there are these faint horizonal scratchs that I can only see at the right angle using light from my flash light, they look rainbow colored top-to-bottom or something? Really weird.
Out of frustration, here's what I just tried on about a 12" by 8" section of my quarter panel: PC7424, yellow Sonus "cutting" (not sure if it's technically a cutting pad, it's the most agressive one in the sonus kit) pad with SSR3, PC set on speed 6. I moved at a rate of about 1/4" per second, putting quite a bit of pressure on the PC (enough to where it just barely begins to bog). After about 3 passes like this, I lower the speed to 4 and go over it with about 3 more passes, at a slightly quicker movement of the buffer.
Anyway, next I did SSR2.5 with the yellow pad, same technique (speed 6 followed by 4). Then SSR2.5 with the white (SFX-2) sonus pad, and then SFX-2 polish with the white (SFX-2) sonus pad (both using the same technique). Then PBW's professional polish, white pad, 3.5 speed.
I VERY lightly buffed with a microfiber from poorboy's world, then used meg's quick detailer and VERY light pressure on my PBW microfiber to remove the final residue and to dry the panel.
Stepped back to examine my work, there are still those ugly scratchs that I can see with my flashlight from an exact angle. The angle has to be so precice that I can't even see all of the faint scratchs from the same angle on that 12" long section.
I really can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. I seem to have pretty good products, so I'm sure it's simply user error... But I've read so much online I really don't know what I could be doing wrong. Any help / advice / ideas are appreciated.

edit: I know my polishing isn't just doing nothing, because I DO get hologramming if I really attack it with SSR3 and the yellow pad. But once I remove the hologramming with a milder polish, the scratchs/swirl marks/whatever is ALWAYS still there, so I've got not clue...