I finished detailing my dark blue car several weeks ago, and was very pleased with the result. But then I had to go and examine it with my new toy, a 500-watt hand-held halogen lamp that I picked up at Home Depot for $20. There were many swirls, faint scratches and water stain remnants that I had never seen before. You might ask why I was concerned, since they were invisible without the halogen. Don’t ask. This is Autopia.
I first tried mild abrasives with a white polishing pad�Menzerna Final Polish, Einszette Metal Polish and Paint Polish�but there was no change. Then I jumped to 3M PI-III MG with a yellow cutting pad, and wow. Almost everything disappeared. This confirmed the conclusion I had just about reached that PI-III MG would become my workhorse polish of choice.
But then, what the heck, in for a dime, in for a dollar, so I went over it with DACP, which I had never used before. This took it ALL out. I tried several different areas, and the story was the same. The PI-III took out most of it, with no improvement with a second pass, and then DACP took out the rest. If I started with DACP, there was no point in following up with PI-III, because the DACP had gotten it all.
In all instances I worked the product in thoroughly, mostly at 4, finishing up with 5, and buffed it off with a MF towel when it was dry and almost gone. I followed up with Menzerna Final Polish, white pad.
This is what I think I can and cannot conclude:
1. DACP is more abrasive than PI-III, but not necessarily “better.� For this particular car at this particular time, DACP was the better choice, but I can’t say that would always be the case. Another car might not need the added aggressiveness provided by DACP. When my son brings his car over for its first-ever detailing, it would be fun to do a small section with PI-III and examine it with the halogen lamp to see if it needs DACP. But if I don’t have time for that foolishness, I’ll probably just reach for the DACP.
2. Both were easy to apply and remove.
3. Neither one produced swirls or hazing with the yellow cutting pad. The shine was excellent with both. I didn’t have a chance to compare the two side by side in the sun, but my impression is that they would be about the same. I now understand why some folks feel they can jump from DACP or PI-III directly to wax or sealant.
4. I followed up with FP, but try as I might, I couldn’t detect an improvement in shine. But others might. It just seems right to follow a yellow pad with something milder on a white pad to smooth the paint a bit. And it squeaked when I buffed the FP off with a MF towel. I love that.
5. Do NOT buy a 500-watt halogen lamp. It will ruin your life.
I first tried mild abrasives with a white polishing pad�Menzerna Final Polish, Einszette Metal Polish and Paint Polish�but there was no change. Then I jumped to 3M PI-III MG with a yellow cutting pad, and wow. Almost everything disappeared. This confirmed the conclusion I had just about reached that PI-III MG would become my workhorse polish of choice.
But then, what the heck, in for a dime, in for a dollar, so I went over it with DACP, which I had never used before. This took it ALL out. I tried several different areas, and the story was the same. The PI-III took out most of it, with no improvement with a second pass, and then DACP took out the rest. If I started with DACP, there was no point in following up with PI-III, because the DACP had gotten it all.
In all instances I worked the product in thoroughly, mostly at 4, finishing up with 5, and buffed it off with a MF towel when it was dry and almost gone. I followed up with Menzerna Final Polish, white pad.
This is what I think I can and cannot conclude:
1. DACP is more abrasive than PI-III, but not necessarily “better.� For this particular car at this particular time, DACP was the better choice, but I can’t say that would always be the case. Another car might not need the added aggressiveness provided by DACP. When my son brings his car over for its first-ever detailing, it would be fun to do a small section with PI-III and examine it with the halogen lamp to see if it needs DACP. But if I don’t have time for that foolishness, I’ll probably just reach for the DACP.
2. Both were easy to apply and remove.
3. Neither one produced swirls or hazing with the yellow cutting pad. The shine was excellent with both. I didn’t have a chance to compare the two side by side in the sun, but my impression is that they would be about the same. I now understand why some folks feel they can jump from DACP or PI-III directly to wax or sealant.
4. I followed up with FP, but try as I might, I couldn’t detect an improvement in shine. But others might. It just seems right to follow a yellow pad with something milder on a white pad to smooth the paint a bit. And it squeaked when I buffed the FP off with a MF towel. I love that.
5. Do NOT buy a 500-watt halogen lamp. It will ruin your life.