Accumulator
Well-known member
At the risk of once again being a [jerk], I *am* gonna repeat that I`m no Pro. Eh, sorry to belabor that, but I have *so much* respect for anybody who does this stuff professionally that I`m always compelled to say that. I`m simply not time-efficient enough to be a Professional Detailer and I lack the enthusiasm for Detailing that I assume Pros must have.
I agree completely about that "do no harm"! That`s a big part of why I post much of what I do/don`t advocate.
Since I`m in a self-deprecatory mood, some of my most egregious detailing mistakes include:
-Damaging paint by not knowing when to say when
-Melting stuff with a steamer
-Marring paint by not thinking through the basic mechanics of this stuff
AND...
-Listening to somebody else instead of figuring it out for myself, preferably ahead of time
That last one is the burr under my saddle that got me going in the first place.
I am gonna keep reminding myself that whenever I think I oughta rant about something I should just step away...Different people find different stuff helpful/not and I keep forgetting that. OK, back to the topic at hand.
Layering BF? I have limited experience with BF, but multiple applications of their Gloss Enhancing Polish did seem to provide better filling of light marring and multiple application of All Finish Paint Protection (~24 hours apart) lasted longer for me than just one, but not all that much.
I never tried topping BFAFPP with wax, but BF claimed it`d be OK and IIRC that`s part of their current Full System. It was suggested that Collinite 845 might be too high in solvents to be safe, but I can`t recall it having ever messed up anything I applied it over, not even light glazes that I suspected might be vulnerable to solvent action. But of course YMMV always applies and it`d be a shame for somebody to mess up a fresh coat of LSP by trying to improve it with such stuff (somebody here once messed up Collinite by topping it with Souveran of all things...ya just never know).
Short Version of Layering Test:
-Prep entire panel uniformly
-LSP entire panel
-ReLSP test portion of panel
-ReLSP entire panel (to equalize Start Times of testing period)
-Observe and draw conclusions; if desired, rework application method and reevaluate
I should`ve just posted that in the first place if I couldn`t stay quiet.
I agree completely about that "do no harm"! That`s a big part of why I post much of what I do/don`t advocate.
Since I`m in a self-deprecatory mood, some of my most egregious detailing mistakes include:
-Damaging paint by not knowing when to say when
-Melting stuff with a steamer
-Marring paint by not thinking through the basic mechanics of this stuff
AND...
-Listening to somebody else instead of figuring it out for myself, preferably ahead of time
That last one is the burr under my saddle that got me going in the first place.
I am gonna keep reminding myself that whenever I think I oughta rant about something I should just step away...Different people find different stuff helpful/not and I keep forgetting that. OK, back to the topic at hand.
Layering BF? I have limited experience with BF, but multiple applications of their Gloss Enhancing Polish did seem to provide better filling of light marring and multiple application of All Finish Paint Protection (~24 hours apart) lasted longer for me than just one, but not all that much.
I never tried topping BFAFPP with wax, but BF claimed it`d be OK and IIRC that`s part of their current Full System. It was suggested that Collinite 845 might be too high in solvents to be safe, but I can`t recall it having ever messed up anything I applied it over, not even light glazes that I suspected might be vulnerable to solvent action. But of course YMMV always applies and it`d be a shame for somebody to mess up a fresh coat of LSP by trying to improve it with such stuff (somebody here once messed up Collinite by topping it with Souveran of all things...ya just never know).
Short Version of Layering Test:
-Prep entire panel uniformly
-LSP entire panel
-ReLSP test portion of panel
-ReLSP entire panel (to equalize Start Times of testing period)
-Observe and draw conclusions; if desired, rework application method and reevaluate
I should`ve just posted that in the first place if I couldn`t stay quiet.