ronmart said:
You must have an American or Japanese car!

Those require a lot more abrasiveness.
If you have a German car (excluding pre-2005 Mercedes which have diamond clear coat), then Griots is perfect..
Two of our cars are Audis, and the clear on those is way too hard for mild approaches like the GG's pad

It'd be OK for a final buff on them with something really mild, but I prefer to use the Cyclo for that. I thought the GG's were a bit mild for '86-'87 Benzes I used to have too :nixweiss Can't remember if I've used them on a BMW, but maybe I'll try them on my M3 some time.
Actually, I was thinking about how mild the GG's pads are on my old Jag, which has *very* soft single-stage! I was getting nowhere with the Griot's orange and Machine Polish #2, then I tried it with the Cyclo and it worked great! Heh heh, sounds like you and I are working on some mighty different types of paint, or otherwise just having different experiences with those pads.
People oughta try them for themselves, if only because of how durable they are. There are worse things than finding a polishing pad is a bit too mild.
Chris223- Yeah, the 6" pad works fine with every backing plate I've tried it with. They up-sized their pads a few years ago so there's a little comfort margin with regard to the diameter.
Go ahead and try that PC out! The only conceivable problem I can think of is light hazing if you use an aggressive product and don't let it break down completely. Even stuff like that is only a problem if you don't go about things in a sensible way (do one panel and inspect it in different lighting to see how things are going before you do the whole car). It's *FAR* more likely that you'll discover that the PC's too mild for what you want to accomplish, at least with the first combo you try. It really is nothing more than a "fast hand that doesn't get tired".
Get some mild polish and some wax, some polishing and finishing pads, and you'll see what I mean

A friend of mine who usually lets her husband do her Lexus got tired of waiting for him to do it (I'd lent him my older PC for the job). She did her RX330 with the PC, GG's orange polishing pad, and 1Z MetallicPolishWax. First time she'd ever touched the PC, no coaching from me or anybody else, just her common sense. Turned out fine by her standards (I would've gotten more aggressive on the marring

). She then topped the MP with Meg's #16 using the PC and GG's red pad, putting the #16 on the pad with a butter knife. Again, no coaching, though she remembered that I'm always saying to put it on thin. Turned out great. Doing gentle work by PC is pretty much a no-brainer.