Heat is good for paint and is a biproduct of pad to paint friction
most often its a dried up foam pad spinning at really high rpm on a rotary moved too slowly over the paint that causes burns and also bubbles from delamination of the clear coat, binders and colour coats.
I began experimenting last year with reflowing the paint on some of our race cars with banged up panels that were due for repair and repainting
from this, I was able to successfully buff at 3000 rpm on my makita 9227 with the same 1 inch per second movements with all varieties of foam pads and special non abrasive polishes from Australia and USA. even on plastic bars. without damage.
as long as there is sufficient lubrication on the pad (we used a few drops of parrafin oil), paint on metal panels (not GRP) can be buffed for long periods without any damage, even though the temp of the paint would be so hot that it was almost in a semi fluid state.
we did achieve some level of reflowing and orange peel reduction due to the heat and the special products used
However we also achieved what is known as "PAINT TWIST"
here is a recent post from a true professional I know on another forum I just lurk on
Heat is a vital part of getting the paint perfectly polished but it can also be its own own worst enemy.
Too much heat and the paint can 'twist'. Paint twisting occurs when the heat and friction created by the machine, pad, buffing liquid, and applied pressure combine to alter the bond between the paint, primer, or substrate it is attached to.
What does this mean?
Well, the result of paint twist resembles the sidewall of a drag slick leaving the line.
Heat is caused by friction and as the type of paint systems used by different manufacturers varies greatly, so do the way they respond to polishing and the different temperatures of heat generated.
eg, honda paint is soft and sticky and when machine polishing with a rotary generates alot more friction and therefore heat than the same polish/pad/machine combo than say are harder type of paint like VW.
So you have to factor in these variables to machine polish safely.
If you do not understand different paint and polish systems and know their limitations and also your own limitations then heat can be very detrimental.
On the other hand, heat is very very important in polishing, it warms the paintwork and makes it softer so you can use a mild polish with a mild pad but with a higher buffer speed and increased pressure on the pad to create more friction without removing too much thickness so you can cut slowly but well and more importantly finish down nicely, preventing buffer trails and holograms.
Im my opinion, if you are scared of a little heat in the panel then you do not know how to control the heat due to inexperience and also dont fully understand the benefits of heat in the frst place.
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Custom Car Care Wagga- Supplying premium detailing services throughout the Riverina
on some panels, we simply drove the defects further into the paint and softened the paint significantly. not ideal at all.
you can correct without much heat as is the case with DA's due to their 6000 - 12000 OPM speeds and very large orbit throw (FLEX 8mm orbit throw)
however if you want to reduce orange peel a little bit, make the paint easier to correct, especially when dealing with scratch resistant powder coat clears, ceramiclear and powdered paints (liquidless system) and semi reflow the paint, then 1800 to 2700 rpm speeds with non abrasive polishes will achieve this.
However its a big risk and we only do this on certain paints and those that have not been cut back twice by other detailers.
when correcting, its smarter to use microfibre machine pads, silk wool, foamed wool or natural 4ply twisted wool or light cut foam pads and use lower rpm speeds with a little pressure and .5 inch or 1 inch per second movements and a little some pressure or focus the abrasives by polishing a smaller area than to use traditional methods of 1500 - 2200 rpm with synthetic wool (causes more swirls and increases risk of burning paint) and use heaps of pressure and move the machine too slowly.
self healing reflow paint doesn't like much heat, high rpm's and wool pads. you'll hurt the paint if you treat it that way and make life harder for yourself.