TH0001- That's good thinking! And yeah, the 3M PI-III EC *does* deal with texture issues/sanding scratches very well.
Off-topic: do you have the same challenges removing 2000-2500 scratches when you use Meguiar's/Nikken/Mirka papers? I seem to be able to get those out *so* easily, even by *hand/PC*, and yeah, I inspect with magnification and they're *out*.
Back when I used 3M paper I *did* have all sorts of challenges getting things 100% smooth afterwards and I can't help but wonder if this might explain our differing experiences :nixweiss
bert31- Besides the way the bigger abrasives actually take off paint, the diffs that *I* appreciate between the M105 and the 3M PI-III EC aren't so much a matter of how much cut they have, but of how the two products work.
There's no way (IME) to be less than full-on-aggressive with the 3M; it's rocks-in-a-bottle and you're gonna be dealing with lots of abrasive dust, follow-ups plural, and it's rotary-only. It's very conventional in terms of work-time and, well, everything else.
The 1Z Pasta Intensiv can be used more broadly (application method/medium, etc.), finishes out a whole lot better (than the 3M) and still cuts pretty well, but sometimes it's simply not enough and I'm *not* in favor of doing a panel over and over and over if I can avoid it.
The M105 can be used very aggressively, rather *mildly*, and in-between the two. By hand, RO/DA or rotary. But it's very different behavior-wise and for somebody who can't do small areas at a time, clean the pads often, and otherwise mess around the way I can, it might be *too* different.
Somebody like
Totoland Mach can probably do a whole *car* with the various steps that start with 3M EC in the same time I might spend doing a few panels with M105 and a single follow-up

But then I'm still working faster than I would with some other approaches.