The Other PC- Thanks for expanding on your explanation, it makes even better sense now. I'll save my "weight of the pads" spiel for discussions regarding which counterweight to use

I do, however, wonder if I'm still missing something here:
[QUOTE- the other PC ]It’s only more concentrated if you have the same force on both... [/QUOTE]
But it *is* more concentrated in this application, right? Since I *can* apply more force without it bogging, that's what I do.
BaseSteala112- Yeah, the stilleto heel analogy was exactly what I had in mind (having seen the damage from them on numerous floors). I *was* factoring in increased force too, as mentioned above. I'm not one for "letting the weight of the machine suffice", with a PC/Cyclo I lean on it. But since the PC bogs down at the application of a certain amount of force, I *can't* effectively lean on it as hard with the larger pads.
the other PC said:
The reason you've never seen 4" pads "jiggle" is because you've never leaned into them so hard that it bogged down the machine. It can be done but it's abusive and unproductive.
FWIW, I put a *lot* of force on my PC with a green Cyclo 4" pad (enough that it damaged the paint- "abusive" is right and not just to the PC). It didn't bog down, just as the Cyclo with doesn't bog down no matter how hard I press on it (and I mean panel-distorting pressure

). If I ever have a scrap panel around I'll see what it takes to really bog down the PC with that pad..it'd have to really be something that nobody in their right mind would attempt.
Kudos to you for these good explanations (I'm also thinking of the one about pressure applied over area with regard to towels marring finishes) and for making me exercise my brain a little more than I had been
