SuperBee364
New member
I've always had great luck with SIP and PFW finishing down *very* well. Rarely would I get grams or compounding marks.
I had also had some pretty good luck getting M105 and M95 to finish down pretty well with PFW, too. Sometimes I could finish holo-free with it, other times it looked pretty nasty.
So yesterday, Greg Nichols and I were working on a Bentley. Black, of course. We both started off with PFW's. Greg was working M105, and I was working M95. Neither one of us were having very good luck in finishing out our respective polishes. We really weren't surprised, since Bentleys have such incredibly soft paint. So we just kinida took our lumps, knowing that we were in for a very long day of compounding haze/holo cleanup. Then Greg pulls out a brand new PFW. He does one application on the trunk with it with 105, and it finished out *completely* holo free. He then successfully did two more panels holo free. After that, it didn't matter how much he spurred the pad, it left holos like crazy. So I grabbed a brand new PFW (thanks, Greg!) and had the exact same results: three body panels finished down completely holo free, but after that, grams like crazy.
Now the really funny part of this is that we had tried all sorts of different pads with the 105, ranging from red wave finishing foam up through PFW. Every pad *except* for the brand new PFW's left crazy holograms. Even the zero-bite red wave finishing foam. Yet the brand new PFW's finished down flawlessly.
We were far enough into the correction that we didn't wash the pads and try again, but our clean (but used) PFW's didn't give us the finish that the new pads did.
Anyway, just thought I'd pass along the results of using PFW and 105/95 on *really* soft paint. It kinda looks like PFW's are the winning pads when it comes to the finish you can get with Megs new compounds.
I normally don't post C&B's on client cars, but I think Greg and I are planning on posting one after we get the car done. We're going to work on it again this coming Monday.
I had also had some pretty good luck getting M105 and M95 to finish down pretty well with PFW, too. Sometimes I could finish holo-free with it, other times it looked pretty nasty.
So yesterday, Greg Nichols and I were working on a Bentley. Black, of course. We both started off with PFW's. Greg was working M105, and I was working M95. Neither one of us were having very good luck in finishing out our respective polishes. We really weren't surprised, since Bentleys have such incredibly soft paint. So we just kinida took our lumps, knowing that we were in for a very long day of compounding haze/holo cleanup. Then Greg pulls out a brand new PFW. He does one application on the trunk with it with 105, and it finished out *completely* holo free. He then successfully did two more panels holo free. After that, it didn't matter how much he spurred the pad, it left holos like crazy. So I grabbed a brand new PFW (thanks, Greg!) and had the exact same results: three body panels finished down completely holo free, but after that, grams like crazy.
Now the really funny part of this is that we had tried all sorts of different pads with the 105, ranging from red wave finishing foam up through PFW. Every pad *except* for the brand new PFW's left crazy holograms. Even the zero-bite red wave finishing foam. Yet the brand new PFW's finished down flawlessly.
We were far enough into the correction that we didn't wash the pads and try again, but our clean (but used) PFW's didn't give us the finish that the new pads did.
Anyway, just thought I'd pass along the results of using PFW and 105/95 on *really* soft paint. It kinda looks like PFW's are the winning pads when it comes to the finish you can get with Megs new compounds.
I normally don't post C&B's on client cars, but I think Greg and I are planning on posting one after we get the car done. We're going to work on it again this coming Monday.