David F.- Sorry to have been unclear. I use the Cyclo (or, upon occasion, the PC) for the final *polishing* step, to remove any holograms that might be present and/or provide a more gentle (and idiot-proof) final pass.
Note that I hardly ever do serious correction, after I buy something used (e.g., the Blazer or, currently, the M3) I correct it *once* and then it never gets bad enough to need more rotary work; I can keep it nice with just the Cyclo/PC. I've rotaried my wife's '00 A8 once since new, ditto for the S8 (only did that one after the deer-incident repairs). If I used the rotary more often I might be able to get things perfect with just that, but I simply don't polish cars much these days.
FWIW you *can* do 100% correction with the PC/Cyclo, at least on medium/soft paint. I've never rotaried the MPV and the only marring I couldn't remove I was consciously leaving so as to not thin the clear too much (I learned how thin it is by messing it up in one spot trying to remove a bad scratch- *with the PC* ).
Heh heh, when you relate the story of the guy who thought he could fix a bad scratch in just ~half an hour with the PC I had to :chuckle: It can take a lot longer than that, but I damaged the MPV in a lot *less* time than that using a 4" pad...
I removed the last RIDS from the S8 with the PC/4". Took a little while but it came out just fine.
I've been able to remove marring from hard Audi clear *by hand*, it just took an incredibly long time. This was the area behind the door handles where you simply can't fit a machine pad in there (fingernail scratches and they were pretty bad- took *forever*). The whole thing boils down to mechanical abrasion and that can be done without a rotary with the requisite time/effort...which is often a lot more than anybody in their right mind is willing to expend

I didn't fix that 1" x 3" area behind the door handles in just half an hour or anything, it took a very, very long time...but I did it.
Consider that people were polishing stone (and gemstones) long before the advent of mechanical/power polishers...back in the days when labor was cheap people did some pretty incredible things by hand
