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Heide264 said:Okay, I didn't have to be in early today, so I decided to bust out my box of fun stuff. I started at 9:30pm with the wash and finished buffing off the BF at 12:30am. Was a bit hesitant about what I was doing until I buffed off that BF and saw the result. Wow. Am I ever impressed...
1.) Yup, theres marring. A decent amount. I think I should have put down some sealant as soon as I got the car home from the dealer. Next time around I may look into picking up a machine and a slightly more aggressive polish. That and my father wants me to do my moms 4 year old saab for mothers day.
2.) Can somebody compare and contrast hand polishing and waxing? I treated them as almost the same process, with a bit more 'umph' behind the polishing. Should there be a haze left behind the polish? When do I know I am done with an area? I just worked it a bit and then moved on.
3.) I think I need something to remove the oils left by the polish before applying the sealant next time. I have a feeling it would have gone on much easier that way. Also, a foam applicator over the microfiber pad applicator would probably have helped as well.
4.) Applicator pads of any sort should have a frekin wrist strap. Thats obnoxious to drop it, run upstairs, rinse it off, shake it dry-ish, and then start back up.
All in all, very impressed. ... Next time I will need to have more towels on back up for buffing.
Accumulator said:
Glad to hear you're happy with how it turned out. Gee, that was mighty quick too!
Well, no real surprise there, and I doubt that sealing it earlier would've helped much. Leaving aside how the dealer probably marred it up, washing without marring is very, *VERY* difficult.Yeah, I really do think you'd consider the machine to be money well-spent. There are a few products that work OK by hand, but man-oh-man is it a workout.
Approaching it backwards, waxing/sealing is basically just wiping a product on the surface, letting it flash off ("dry") and then buffing off the residue (which is about 95% of what you put on in the first place, hence all the "thin thin thin" advice). There's usually no "working" the product; you merely transfer it from the applicator to the vehicle's surface.
Polishig is much more involved, both in what you're doing and how to do it. With products like Menzerna, you need to work the product until it breaks down. During this process you need to apply sufficient pressure for the abrasives to "grind down" the paint. It's basically like sanding wood.
You usually (as in, almost always) want to buff off the polish before it dries completely. And you usually do it over and over and over again until you've "ground down" the paint enough to "fix" the scratches/etc.
Yeah, I generally use foam. You can use IPA to strip the oils, but TOL's PrepWash is better IME. Or use the BF prep product (forget what they call it these days) between the Menzerna and the BF; it works well and is easy, at least it was when I last used it.
Again, I'm glad it turned out well. Yeah, get more applicators, towels, and consider that BF pre-sealant stuff. And I'd sure go with a different approach (and a polisher if possible) if you're doing that Saab!
Heide264 said:I One last question for now. I want to add another coat or two of that BF on when I have time. Considering it may have no applied perfectly due to the oils from the menzerna, would it be advisable to just wipe it down with Prepsol and then apply another coat after my trip to PSU this weekend (following a good wash, of course)? I know prepsol is a solvent, and I assume it will take off both the sealant AND the polish oils if there are any stuck under the sealant. Then I could just apply two fresh coats of the BF. True? False?
Accumulator said:If things still look OK after the wash, I'd just apply more BF without stripping it. This is another case where I don't think you should go looking for problems that aren't readily apparent
IMO, when the oils are gonna cause real problems, they *do*...you can notice it. Otherwise I think the biggest issue might be some marring "coming back" as the oils dissipate (yeah, *under* the still-OK LSP, sounds weird but I've seen it happen). In that case you're looking at basically starting over to fix the marring again (or "for real"). But that oughta take a while even if it is gonna happen so I'd just add another layer of BF if things are looking OK.
Oh, and I always kinda liked Saabs, even though I never owned one. No idea how the clear is (hard/soft) but for "family and friends" level details, well, anything is better than nothing![]()
Heide264 said:Will dig through the hardware downstairs. Is there any difference between a normal 90 degree sander/grinder and a polisher? Excuse the somewhat obvious question. I am assuming a grinder/sander would have a whole lot more torque and be potentiall dangerous for car polish...
RevC said:Congrats on the STi, have a 2011 SSM stage 2 sedan as well.
extrabolts said:Congratulations on the car and welcome! I sort of skimmed the first few pages, but here are my random thoughts -
- Polishing by hand - I really don't think this is worth it. Ask yourself: would I like to polish my car at least once / year? If so, save up and buy a machine. I really like my Flex but there are other good options that are cheaper. Of you don't to polish at least once / year, I'd just pay someone to do it for you every few years or whenever.
- ONR: Good stuff. Dilute it as indicated on the bottle and you have a great clay lube. I use it at detail spray strength for things like door jams, bird bombs, etc.
- Make sure to tear the tags off your microfiber towels and wash them without any fabric softener sheets. This will keep them very staticy, which is good, but also requires that you use a LOT of microfibers. I'd use significantly more than 2 to ONR a vehicle. I'd probably divide the car into 3 or 4 sections and use a different wet and dry towel for each section.
- The little bumps on your paint sounds like orange peel. Unfortunately, this is perfectly normal.
- Wax or seal frequently. It will make washing much easier, and I've found that a well-waxed car resists marring better during washes.
- Never use any pressure when touching your paint. The only exception is polishing, but that happens infrequently. If you have good wax down, bird bombs should come right off even with ONR. If not, go get your clay and use that with light pressure. Resist the urge to "rub" stuff off, always think wipe not rub.
Heide264 said:.. [when washing MFs I use].. Cold cycle..
..the undercarriage spray would be awesome before I throw my new exhaust on tomorrow.
Accumulator said:No need to use cold, hot water, even *VERY* hot, doesn't damage MFs. I just did a load on "sanitary cycle" this morning, and plenty of people actually *boil* them! It takes an awfully high temp to damage MFs, so high that you basically don't have to worry about it.
Yeah, keeping the undercarriage nice has all sorts of benefits :xyxthumbs