So just some background about myself; I have been using a rotary for the past 7 years, heavy paint correction including aggressive compounds, wool pads, etc. without issue for the past 6 years, and have used my rotary on hundreds of vehicles, probably the wool pad for serious paint correction on at least 30 vehicles, all with no issue.
Last weekend, I purchased a brand new 2013 Subaru BRZ in Satin White Pearl, 5 miles on the odometer. About two days later, the car now having 130 miles on it, I found some fairly deep imperfections on the front bumper. I have heard from others that the paint on these cars is considered brittle, and the location of the imperfections worried me, as it was close to an edge on the front bumper. I was pretty sure I would need a respray with how deep they looked, but before doing that, I wanted to give it a try with the rotary.
Here is what it looked like:
Before working on this spot, I wanted the best angle I could, so I jacked up the front of the car to bring it closer to body level. I pulled out my DeWalt rotary with a Malco cutting pad and medium compound, which didn't really do much, so I stepped up to the wool pad with the Malco HD Compound. I had about three or four passes on the flat area of the front bumper, no pressure applied, just letting the pad do the work, and noticed a fairly significant difference.
I sat and stared at it for a while, and still noticed the deep imperfection was fairly visible still along the crease of the front bumper, which I was making sure to stay away from with the wool pad and compound. Against my better judgment and knowing it was my own car to risk, I thought "let me get one pass along the edge", and literally, one pass on the crease, with no pressure applied, this is the result. Knowing that this spot was going to have to be resprayed anyways, I wasn't devastated, but still upset with myself that I pushed it further than I was comfortable with, and pretty much told myself "told you so" afterwards.
So, lesson here is stick with your instinct and what you've learned over the years, and stay away from creases with a rotary/wool pad/compound combo, especially on a plastic bumper.
I guess the next step is a bumper respray, unless anyone else has any other ideas on correcting this?
Here's a shot of the car out in the sun even after the "oopsie", the Satin White Pearl is an incredible color. Luckily the burn through isn't that noticeable, and I only really see it at certain angles in the garage.
Last weekend, I purchased a brand new 2013 Subaru BRZ in Satin White Pearl, 5 miles on the odometer. About two days later, the car now having 130 miles on it, I found some fairly deep imperfections on the front bumper. I have heard from others that the paint on these cars is considered brittle, and the location of the imperfections worried me, as it was close to an edge on the front bumper. I was pretty sure I would need a respray with how deep they looked, but before doing that, I wanted to give it a try with the rotary.
Here is what it looked like:


Before working on this spot, I wanted the best angle I could, so I jacked up the front of the car to bring it closer to body level. I pulled out my DeWalt rotary with a Malco cutting pad and medium compound, which didn't really do much, so I stepped up to the wool pad with the Malco HD Compound. I had about three or four passes on the flat area of the front bumper, no pressure applied, just letting the pad do the work, and noticed a fairly significant difference.



I sat and stared at it for a while, and still noticed the deep imperfection was fairly visible still along the crease of the front bumper, which I was making sure to stay away from with the wool pad and compound. Against my better judgment and knowing it was my own car to risk, I thought "let me get one pass along the edge", and literally, one pass on the crease, with no pressure applied, this is the result. Knowing that this spot was going to have to be resprayed anyways, I wasn't devastated, but still upset with myself that I pushed it further than I was comfortable with, and pretty much told myself "told you so" afterwards.



So, lesson here is stick with your instinct and what you've learned over the years, and stay away from creases with a rotary/wool pad/compound combo, especially on a plastic bumper.
I guess the next step is a bumper respray, unless anyone else has any other ideas on correcting this?
Here's a shot of the car out in the sun even after the "oopsie", the Satin White Pearl is an incredible color. Luckily the burn through isn't that noticeable, and I only really see it at certain angles in the garage.
