I just want to share my thoughts, refections and also my admiration while working for the first time with a rotary. (I hope this incoherent rant will make some sense.)
After doing a couple of cars with a combination of Menzerna and Cyclo I decided to purchase a rotary. The amount of effort (and time) spent on each car when using the Cyclo without getting the results I wanted was killing me. New and better tools had to be the answer!
So I bought a rotary ("Flex"), some more Menzerna and a couple of panels to practice on from the junkyard. I spent several nights practicing (actually trying to ruin the paint on the panels).
Trying to ruin the paint with the rotary was actually an idea I picked up in a thread from a fellow DC. Great idea! I learned alot that way, for example keep the rotary MOVING and be CAREFUL with edges.
Today I started work on my wife's car. The amount of effort (and time) I've spent on each panel with the rotary is unbelievable. I've spent as much time on half my car just with the rotary as some fellow DC spend on an entire detail. I was ready to give up after a several hours, with my confidence in rock bottom...
I left my tools in the garage and had dinner with my family. After dinner I went back to the garage. One half of the car looked like crap and the other half looked decent. The problem was that the decent half was the untouched half of the car - not the "before after" I was hoping for... But then something happened.
I decided to let the rotary be and do a pass with the Cyclo over the half I'd used the rotary on. I used Menzerna FPII and suddenly things were looking better, alot better.
It's taking me just as long as before (if not even longer), but the results are better than ever. I'm so proud!
As I write this I feel even more respect and admiration for those of you (Anthony Orosco, Clean Dean, GSRStilez just to name a few) who get those awesome results I see everyday on this forum.
I've come to understand that there is NO WAY I'm going to achieve those results just by purchasing some tools and spending hours reading threads on this forum (but it will help).
As always, it takes time and effort to master an art. My hat is off!
After doing a couple of cars with a combination of Menzerna and Cyclo I decided to purchase a rotary. The amount of effort (and time) spent on each car when using the Cyclo without getting the results I wanted was killing me. New and better tools had to be the answer!
So I bought a rotary ("Flex"), some more Menzerna and a couple of panels to practice on from the junkyard. I spent several nights practicing (actually trying to ruin the paint on the panels).
Trying to ruin the paint with the rotary was actually an idea I picked up in a thread from a fellow DC. Great idea! I learned alot that way, for example keep the rotary MOVING and be CAREFUL with edges.
Today I started work on my wife's car. The amount of effort (and time) I've spent on each panel with the rotary is unbelievable. I've spent as much time on half my car just with the rotary as some fellow DC spend on an entire detail. I was ready to give up after a several hours, with my confidence in rock bottom...
I left my tools in the garage and had dinner with my family. After dinner I went back to the garage. One half of the car looked like crap and the other half looked decent. The problem was that the decent half was the untouched half of the car - not the "before after" I was hoping for... But then something happened.
I decided to let the rotary be and do a pass with the Cyclo over the half I'd used the rotary on. I used Menzerna FPII and suddenly things were looking better, alot better.
It's taking me just as long as before (if not even longer), but the results are better than ever. I'm so proud!
As I write this I feel even more respect and admiration for those of you (Anthony Orosco, Clean Dean, GSRStilez just to name a few) who get those awesome results I see everyday on this forum.
I've come to understand that there is NO WAY I'm going to achieve those results just by purchasing some tools and spending hours reading threads on this forum (but it will help).
As always, it takes time and effort to master an art. My hat is off!