So yesterday I carved out the whole day to polish and seal my X3. The previous evening I was able to wash and clay it, so I figured I might even be finished by mid afternoon. In the end, it took me from 9:30 to 7:00, and I'm not sure that I'm too much better off than when I started. Now I'm wondering where I went wrong.
I pretty much followed the process detailed in my earlier thread on this board.
First I wiped the car down with Prep-all on every painted surface and taped off all the trim. Then I broke out the PC and started to work.
I compounded a couple of spots where there were RIDS or marring w/SIP on a 4" PFW followed by Menz SIP on a 4" orange pad. I wiped each area clean between rounds using CG Speed Wipe diluted 3:1. This actually worked well, as the deep scratch is now barely noticeable and the marring is gone.
Then I did the whole car -- except the roof, for which I'd need a ladder and which I wasn't comfortable doing -- with Menz 106FA on a white 5.5" pad one pass on each panel. I wiped off each panel as I went, again with Speed Wipe. This took from about 3 hours, and afterward it wasn't clear to me that it had made any dent in the fine swirls that were on the car. The pad was a bit chewed up in the center by the time I was finished.
After a lunch, I went on to the Menz 115 on a 5.5" blue pad. I think I used too much on the hood, because the residue took forever to get off. Diluted Speed Wipe didn't do it, so I had to use it undiluted, and then IPA. I didn't want to use Prep All as it's pretty nasty stuff, and the less I'm exposed to it the better. So this took another 3 hours, and all I can say is that the flake pops a bit more.
Then I sealed with two coats of JetSeal 109, which was easy to work with and looks good. My car is black and shiny, but the swirls are still there if I look closely in good light.
So what did I do wrong? Should I have done the whole car with SIP? More passes with 106FA (which I'm not sure my white pad would have held up for)? Are there ways to make the polishing process go faster without sacrificing quality? I'm probably not going to be able to do this again until Spring, and if possible I'd like to be more efficient and effective next time.
I pretty much followed the process detailed in my earlier thread on this board.
First I wiped the car down with Prep-all on every painted surface and taped off all the trim. Then I broke out the PC and started to work.
I compounded a couple of spots where there were RIDS or marring w/SIP on a 4" PFW followed by Menz SIP on a 4" orange pad. I wiped each area clean between rounds using CG Speed Wipe diluted 3:1. This actually worked well, as the deep scratch is now barely noticeable and the marring is gone.
Then I did the whole car -- except the roof, for which I'd need a ladder and which I wasn't comfortable doing -- with Menz 106FA on a white 5.5" pad one pass on each panel. I wiped off each panel as I went, again with Speed Wipe. This took from about 3 hours, and afterward it wasn't clear to me that it had made any dent in the fine swirls that were on the car. The pad was a bit chewed up in the center by the time I was finished.
After a lunch, I went on to the Menz 115 on a 5.5" blue pad. I think I used too much on the hood, because the residue took forever to get off. Diluted Speed Wipe didn't do it, so I had to use it undiluted, and then IPA. I didn't want to use Prep All as it's pretty nasty stuff, and the less I'm exposed to it the better. So this took another 3 hours, and all I can say is that the flake pops a bit more.
Then I sealed with two coats of JetSeal 109, which was easy to work with and looks good. My car is black and shiny, but the swirls are still there if I look closely in good light.
So what did I do wrong? Should I have done the whole car with SIP? More passes with 106FA (which I'm not sure my white pad would have held up for)? Are there ways to make the polishing process go faster without sacrificing quality? I'm probably not going to be able to do this again until Spring, and if possible I'd like to be more efficient and effective next time.