imported_RedlineIRL
New member
I tested out a couple new products that I just bought, a compound and a polish on a old pannel that I have lying around. Before polishing this pannel was cleaned thoroughly, dawn washed, and sprayed with Meguiars APC. So I divided the pannel in sections and used both the compound and polish in different ones. I used my PC 7424 with 6.5" orange LC CCS pads, dedicated testing pads now since I don't bother with 6.5" anymore, and was pretty surprised at the results I got even with a 6.5" pad. Afterwards I washed the pannel off with a Dawn wash just to make sure that this was nothing more than a fill job. The polished sections of the pannel seemed to repel water rather quickly, so I turned the hose nozzle setting on mist and the polished sections were beading like I just got finished applying fresh LSP. I tried Dawn washing multiple times, spraying the sections down with undilluted Optimum Power Clean and then dawn washing,spraying undilluted Meguiars APC and then dawn washing. I probably washed this pannel 10 times in total with dawn and whatever else I sprayed on it. Even after this, the water still beaded if I sprayed the polished sections with the mist setting on the hose nozzle.
The compound and polish I used claim to be free of silicone oils and be body shop safe. But if this is the case there should not be any beading period IMO, since beading usually indicated some kind of oils or lubricants, correct? I tired everything I could think of short of an IPA to kill the beading, but I couldn't get it to stop doing so. Is beading and sheeting a natural reaction to a surface after polishing, even if it is not loaded with fillers and oils? If not, why am I still getting beading after all of this? All I want to do is see the true surface
The compound and polish I used claim to be free of silicone oils and be body shop safe. But if this is the case there should not be any beading period IMO, since beading usually indicated some kind of oils or lubricants, correct? I tired everything I could think of short of an IPA to kill the beading, but I couldn't get it to stop doing so. Is beading and sheeting a natural reaction to a surface after polishing, even if it is not loaded with fillers and oils? If not, why am I still getting beading after all of this? All I want to do is see the true surface