xtahoex said:
Do you mean when I apply the wax with the finishing pad to keep working it in longer at that time?
I try to head this issue off from the git-go by having *very* little wax on the pad. It's pretty amazing how little you need on there. As a test, when you think there's no more wax on your pad, go over something like chrome or glass (or the black plastic pillars of cars like my audis)- you'll see that the "waxless" pad still lays down a good coat of #16.
Another test is to see how much wax is left in the pad when you're finished. I bet most people have enough excess wax in the pad for a thin-application guy like me to do a few panels

I shoot for virtually *no* wax left in the pad at the end of the job, if there's any left in it I'll do stuff like doorjambs with it.
Sorry, I'm just a broken-record fanatic about how much of this stuff to use, but that seems to be at the root of every issue with the stuff. It occurs to me that a thin application might flash off faster too, maybe that'd help minimize any VOC/solvent-related issues :nixweiss
FWIW I *greatly* prefer applying #16 by machine, even though I initially did it by hand for many years. The machine is better at the "turn the wax liquid" thing than I am

and IMO that's the key to applying #16- you want to turn the paste wax to liquid and spread it over as large an area (as thinly) as possible.