SuperBee364
New member
I'm out of PO106FF (my mainstay), and I'm waiting for my Ultrafina to arrive (UPS shows that it's "out for delivery", yay!). So today I'm using 1Z Hochglanz. I used it a bit last week on a Suburban. Today it's got it's work cut out for it; I'm using it as a "jeweling" polish on the hood of my 'bee. I'm not going to bother with pictures for this one.. you guys have been subjected to too many pictures of my car as it is. 
Just some quick thoughts on the 1Z...
Overall, it is a very nice polish. It finishes down equivalent to 106ff. It's also very easy to use as long as you follow the directions. In particular, keep the rpms below 1k. Anything higher, and the stuff turns into cement. I normally do a slow, faster, faster, slow application of 106ff, which doesn't really work well with the 1Z. It appears to work best if you just keep a constant, relatively slow, rpm through the entire application. Instead of varying the rpm, i've been varying the pressure. A bit heavy handed at first, dropping to just the weight of the buffer. Work it until it disappears, and you're done. It doesn't leave behind much... hardly any removal is necessary. No oily residue like 106.
It doesn't seem to have as much bite as 106. I reworked a section of my hood with SIP and purple foamed wool. The 1Z didn't clean up after the SIP as well as the 106 does. It took two passes with the 1Z compared to one with 106.
Since I'm using just about twice as much polish with the 1Z as I was with106FF, it wipes out the cost savings; 1Z is half the price of 106.
Given the choice between the two, I like 106 better, although 1Z is a good product.

Just some quick thoughts on the 1Z...
Overall, it is a very nice polish. It finishes down equivalent to 106ff. It's also very easy to use as long as you follow the directions. In particular, keep the rpms below 1k. Anything higher, and the stuff turns into cement. I normally do a slow, faster, faster, slow application of 106ff, which doesn't really work well with the 1Z. It appears to work best if you just keep a constant, relatively slow, rpm through the entire application. Instead of varying the rpm, i've been varying the pressure. A bit heavy handed at first, dropping to just the weight of the buffer. Work it until it disappears, and you're done. It doesn't leave behind much... hardly any removal is necessary. No oily residue like 106.
It doesn't seem to have as much bite as 106. I reworked a section of my hood with SIP and purple foamed wool. The 1Z didn't clean up after the SIP as well as the 106 does. It took two passes with the 1Z compared to one with 106.
Since I'm using just about twice as much polish with the 1Z as I was with106FF, it wipes out the cost savings; 1Z is half the price of 106.
Given the choice between the two, I like 106 better, although 1Z is a good product.