I decided to move to Edge pads a few months ago, and have loved them. I save up to 20 minutes per polish session from just flipping the pad instead of getting a new one or cleaning the old one. I haven't done any major correction as all the vehicles I see are relatively marr-free.
Background... did a little mini-detail with PB's new PwS and topped with AJT. Left town and came back. Was looking over the car and noticed some sort of residue on the rear bumper... Clay.. nothing. WD-40... nothing.... FPII on polish pad... nothing. This stuff was hard as a rock. So I got out the Edge orange and OC. Began working it in, medium pressure... no more than 15-20 pounds. Noticed the reside was starting to come off, so I kept the pressure the same and did a few more passes, on the last pass, I realized that that I was no longer polishing paint, but the bumper material.
Super awesome. I'm extatic at this point. So much that I manage to break a few things around the garage.
I slow down, get ahold of myself, and take a gander at the pad:
These might be a bit blurry.
And one more for awesemely good measure:
It seems that the pad was torn.. somehow. I'm still trying to wrap my brain around this one. I was on the edge of the bumper, but the pad was flat on the top of the surface. The pad is incredibly pliable, unlike when it was new... Its been used maybe four times. The pad material is burned like it touched the adapter, burned, then tore away from the weakened portion. The middle plate in there seemed to have gotten ahold of the paint and produced the results you see here.
So... user error? In all likelihood.
Defective pad? Perhaps.
Incredibly costly mistake? Absolutely.
Lesson learned? Yes.
Learn from me.
Background... did a little mini-detail with PB's new PwS and topped with AJT. Left town and came back. Was looking over the car and noticed some sort of residue on the rear bumper... Clay.. nothing. WD-40... nothing.... FPII on polish pad... nothing. This stuff was hard as a rock. So I got out the Edge orange and OC. Began working it in, medium pressure... no more than 15-20 pounds. Noticed the reside was starting to come off, so I kept the pressure the same and did a few more passes, on the last pass, I realized that that I was no longer polishing paint, but the bumper material.

Super awesome. I'm extatic at this point. So much that I manage to break a few things around the garage.
I slow down, get ahold of myself, and take a gander at the pad:

These might be a bit blurry.

And one more for awesemely good measure:

It seems that the pad was torn.. somehow. I'm still trying to wrap my brain around this one. I was on the edge of the bumper, but the pad was flat on the top of the surface. The pad is incredibly pliable, unlike when it was new... Its been used maybe four times. The pad material is burned like it touched the adapter, burned, then tore away from the weakened portion. The middle plate in there seemed to have gotten ahold of the paint and produced the results you see here.
So... user error? In all likelihood.
Defective pad? Perhaps.
Incredibly costly mistake? Absolutely.
Lesson learned? Yes.
Learn from me.