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gmblack3a said:IMO Powergloss has been cast into the stone age since 3M ECC and M105 have hit the market.
lexusgs said:I should be getting a LC 4" white wool pad soon but it is for a PC7424 and I will try it on my hood and roog on my black Lexus. Any advice? I know people generally use wool with rotaries but I don't have one so I will be experimenting with the PC7424 and wool. The LC orange foam pads did not get out some of things and I did not like how the yellows were working, on some occasions they caused all these small fine circular scratches that I could not get back out, maybe there was a grit of sand or something in the foam pad but I stopped using them, it happened twice. Never had any experience with wool but some people said it generally has better correcting ability then foam and takes less time. The LC description says the design leaves none to very little buffing wool marks. I am not going to use a heavy compound but Menzerna IP.
lexusgs said:I should be getting a LC 4" white wool pad soon but it is for a PC7424 and I will try it on my hood and roog on my black Lexus. Any advice?
Accumulator said:My advice is to not try it :grinno:
I've used (~6") wool pads via PC and all they did was leave a lot more (not so-)micromarring while contributing little added aggressiveness compared to foam cutting pads. If the Lexus paint is soft (I was working on a very hard Audi) you might make things harder to fix than they are not.
But I was using I-forget-what-brand wool pads and maybe the 4" LC ones will act completely different :nixweiss I absolutely would not try it myself though, and certainly not on a black are that I cared about. But hey, if it works out, well, great... I'll be glad to hear about it.
I do find it a little odd that you can't get the correction you want with the various 4" cutting pads though :think: Although it takes a while, I can pretty much remove anything that's shallow enough/safe to remove with those, even on the Audis. I recently reduced a RIDS as far as I wanted to go on the Denali XL (also pretty hard clear) using the PC/4". I sorta wonder if all the marring you want to remove is really *safe* to remove..don't wanna thin that clear too much
Gee, don't *I* sound all pessimistic![]()
lexusgs said:I should be getting a LC 4" white wool pad soon but it is for a PC7424 and I will try it on my hood and roog on my black Lexus. Any advice? I know people generally use wool with rotaries but I don't have one so I will be experimenting with the PC7424 and wool. The LC orange foam pads did not get out some of things and I did not like how the yellows were working, on some occasions they caused all these small fine circular scratches that I could not get back out, maybe there was a grit of sand or something in the foam pad but I stopped using them, it happened twice. Never had any experience with wool but some people said it generally has better correcting ability then foam and takes less time. The LC description says the design leaves none to very little buffing wool marks. I am not going to use a heavy compound but Menzerna IP.
TH0001 said:I think its important to note that for the most part we are buffing on clear coat. I know this is kind of basic, but think about this...
Most manufacturer's use the same clear coat over different base coats, so the only difference in color is in the base coat. The clear coat remains the same. (Of course their are obvious exceptions, BMW's harder clear on Sapphire Black and the stupidly soft clear on Jet Black).
This makes brings me to my point... Since a black base coat reflects the most light thru the clear coat, you can see maximum defect levels. Black most accurately shows the condition of the clear coat above it. So if foam is needed to finish out the clear coat to perfection on a black car, then it is really needed on every car to achieve perfection.
Obviously the benefits of finishing out a black car more completely are much more dramatic then finishing out the same clear coat over a silver car. In the black car you might see a 10% improvement, where as on a silver car you may be lucky to see 2%, for the same time invested.
In my experience with wool, you can never get a car 100 percent perfect with it because the fibers will instill light marring in the paint surface (or more light marring then a foam pad, because under a high enough magnification, nothing is perfect). Since this type of marring can be seen to diffuse the paint on black, then it is also diffusing the light on other color's as well. To get the highest gloss we must level the paint as flat as possible to get maximum light reflection. This law is true for all colors, regardless wether we see the defects or not.
So the achieve true maximum gloss on silver, we have to polish out defects that we cannot even see.
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SuperBee364 said:Could you provide a link to that pad? I've been trying to hunt down this new white wool pad with no luck. I'm wondering if it's the same one that Scottwax is using.
lexusgs said:..The roof, hood, and spoiler has some hard water/etching spots that just could not be removed...
lexusgs said:Electrified sheepskin wool compounding pad, spot buff wool pad, 4 inch wool buffing pad, lake country wool pad
Here it is, it is on autogeek and it is pretty cheap, I just got it today, I will try it tonight although I will be cautious to make sure it is not possibly making anything worse.
lexusgs said:The roof, hood, and spoiler has some hard water/etching spots that just could not be removed with the yellow or orange pads with IP no matter how many passes/pushing down so I figured something stronger might be needed.