04BlackAV said:
When I first used my PC I hazed my doors with 1Z PP and a Meguiars polishing pad.And it wasn't that hard to do.The stuff stay's wet forever so it's hard to tell when it's breaking down.I..I finially went over it with some #80 and it cleared up.I don't think you can do any permenant damage with the PC but on black you can sure make things worse if your not carefull.
Interesting about the PP. I usually have to watch that I don't break it down *too fast*. Maybe you just needed to speed things up and/or use less PP. Glad to hear you solved it with the #80, but, well, I find it interesting since I don't think #80 is all *that* much milder than the PP. It *does* break down a lot faster, though.
ANB- Heh heh, no need to feel dumb, it takes a while to get up to speed on this stuff, especially all the terms we use.
Most people consider "swirls" to be the the same as "spiderwebs", sorta circular scratches you get from washing/drying/etc. Pros use the term in a more restrictive fashion, referring to stuff like what you posted- sorta-minor damage caused by a rotary polisher. This damage is in the paint, BTW, not just the wax.
Other people use "spiderwebbing" in its old-school meaning, to refer to actual cracks in the paint (not as common these days as it used to be).
Hazing is the fine "scratches" you put in the paint by using harsh products. If you start with a scratch that you want to remove (a BAD crevice carved in the paint), you'll use a harsh polish to "sand" it out (bringing the surrounding paint down to the level of the bottom of the crevice). This harsh polish will leave small scratches of its own, which then need to be removed with a finer polish. These "small scratches" are "hazing". Think of it like using progressively finer grades of sandpaper to smooth a piece of wood.
This hair-splitting is why some of use just use "marring" as a catch-all term to describe "below-the-surface imperfections" like "swirls", scratches, hazing, acid rain etching, etc.