I put swirls in the paint of my new motorcycle. I use a wet towel to wipe dust off, to photograph the bike. Later I saw swirls (some round, some straight).
I've done a lot of reading, and every "swirl remover" I've seen uses abrasive. Also, every post I've seen says basically you have to use abrasive to get it out.
OK, that makes sense. The scratches are a physical structure, and you have to remove that to remove the swirls.
But, you do it by abrading, which by definition is "scratching" the paint off. So when you are done, you still have scratches or swirls. You can then use progressively finer abrasives but there seems to be a paradox.
You will never be able to get the swirls/scratches you make out without makeing others. The new ones are smaller, but how do you finally move from swirls/scratches to no swirls/scrathes? Doesn't seem possible with an abrasive.
Thanks....
I've done a lot of reading, and every "swirl remover" I've seen uses abrasive. Also, every post I've seen says basically you have to use abrasive to get it out.
OK, that makes sense. The scratches are a physical structure, and you have to remove that to remove the swirls.
But, you do it by abrading, which by definition is "scratching" the paint off. So when you are done, you still have scratches or swirls. You can then use progressively finer abrasives but there seems to be a paradox.
You will never be able to get the swirls/scratches you make out without makeing others. The new ones are smaller, but how do you finally move from swirls/scratches to no swirls/scrathes? Doesn't seem possible with an abrasive.
Thanks....