imported_weekendwarrior
New member
Well, I definitely understand the part of priming the pad thoroughly. You have to grasp the concept of these non diminishing abraisive products acting like a piece of sandpaper.
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Greg Nichols said:I have spent a bit of time using this product and don't get any quality results to speak of. I guess I'll try again. It is full of stuff that fills either on purpose or by accident, so the results seem to be short lived at best.
Thanks for the write up.
Cheers,
ABQDetailer said:I used D151 with 6.5" LC Green with a Flex 3401. I assumed this combo would be THE combo to use for a 1 step product. It seemed like the D151 didn't have much cut at all and didn't really do much? Perhaps LC orange would be better like suggested above, but I'm not confident in finishing with an orange pad.
Also I bought a quart of this stuff and considering the prices (REALLY CHEAP) it leads me to believe Megs wants you to use more product when polishing than normally needed. For example with 106FF, UFSE, and 85RD a little goes a LONG way...so D151 isn't supposed to be used sparringly?
Lastly I have a question about Kevin's pad priming technique. I've always used water or QD for priming my pads whether wool or foam. I'm a big believer in pad priming, but I've never used my product to prime my pads. I thought one of the biggest benefits of pad priming was to ensure the product wasn't soaked into the pad and transferred to the paint? So using the product to prime the pad is defeating one purpose of priming the pad, no? Is priming your pad with this technique only recommended with D151, or Megs products, or every product? That would be pretty expensive with some of the more expensive products!
weekendwarrior said:...the purpose of priming the entire pad with the non diminishing abraisive product is to maximize the cutting ability, by utilizing EVERY square inch of the pad...again, think of the pad covered in product as a sheet of sandpaper. Sometimes, depending on the size of the car, you will have to use multiple pads if one gets too caked with product....
weekendwarrior said:In Kevin's write-up, I would bet he could have skipped the second step with the yellow Meguiar's pad, and gone straight from the rotary to the smaller pad on the PC and gotten the same results.
SuperBee364 said:Here's my latest experience with 151, and why I'm not all that happy with it...
I was doing a black Acura last week. After doing a test section on the trunk, I determined that M105 with PFW, and UF X2 with red foam would give me excellent correction and a flawless finish. Do to an unexpected time constraint, I decided to follow the 105 with 151 on a red pad, and call it done. I didn't have enough time to do UF X2, then an LSP.
After doing the entire car with 105 and PFW, I was left with a very lightly hologramed finish. That's to be expected on such soft paint. However, after doing the entire car with M151 on a red pad, using it pretty much as described by iamwaxman, the car looked far worse that it did after the 105. I was shocked, and needless to say, not very happy. I wish I would have had more time to experiment with the 151 on that particular paint. I just can't imagine how I could have finished it down any finer than I did. That guy will be returning for a free full exterior detail.
artikxscout said:any update on this vs poly seal?
Jason M said:Are you getting hazing even with a finishing pad on soft paints Scott?
Scottwax said:Yes, on soft black paint via DA. #151 will also hologram on softer paints when used via rotary and a polishing pad. Haven't tried it with a finishing pad via rotary yet.