Ben Carufel
New member
I'm really having some trouble with swirls...and I'm sure it's something in my equipment/technique, but I can't for the life of me figure out what. Any help would be appreciated. Here's an example:
This weekend I helped a friend out by detailing his 1996 M3 for him. The car has always been garage kept and he had the hood and bumper replaced about two months ago (and repainted) due to accident and stone chip damage.
The whole car was covered with some moderate swirl marks, and the hood was even worse. It had very noticeable swirl marks and spiderwebbing -- the paint shop obviously did a detail after they painted it, and didn't do a good job.
I set to work with my PC and CMA pads. I used a CMA Yellow pad with 3M SMR for 85% of the paint. It removed maybe 70% of the moderate swirls. I used the same combo for another pass with no better results -- I could only get 70% of the moderate swirls out.
I then set to work on the hood. I used 3M Finesse-It Fine Cut Rubbing Compound and a CMA Yellow pad on the hood, which has had 60 days to cure. I followed it up with 3M Finesse-It Machine Polish and a CMA white pad. This combination removed 90% of the light swirls, but the spiderwebbing and moderate and heavy swirls are still there.
What's going on? Shouldn't 3M FC RC and FI-II MP take out 99.9% of the swirls on the car? How can I possibly get more agressive than that without going to a wool pad?
So my question is, how do I remove these heavy swirls? I dont want to fill them with anything, I want them gone. I've been planning to give my father's 1992 735iL a good detail in the near future, and it's black and has two years of serious swirl marks. That will be my test bed for any new techniques.
I'd appreciate *any* advice on how to improve my swirl remval skills.
For what it's worth I'm buffing with JT International blue microfibers.
This weekend I helped a friend out by detailing his 1996 M3 for him. The car has always been garage kept and he had the hood and bumper replaced about two months ago (and repainted) due to accident and stone chip damage.
The whole car was covered with some moderate swirl marks, and the hood was even worse. It had very noticeable swirl marks and spiderwebbing -- the paint shop obviously did a detail after they painted it, and didn't do a good job.
I set to work with my PC and CMA pads. I used a CMA Yellow pad with 3M SMR for 85% of the paint. It removed maybe 70% of the moderate swirls. I used the same combo for another pass with no better results -- I could only get 70% of the moderate swirls out.
I then set to work on the hood. I used 3M Finesse-It Fine Cut Rubbing Compound and a CMA Yellow pad on the hood, which has had 60 days to cure. I followed it up with 3M Finesse-It Machine Polish and a CMA white pad. This combination removed 90% of the light swirls, but the spiderwebbing and moderate and heavy swirls are still there.
What's going on? Shouldn't 3M FC RC and FI-II MP take out 99.9% of the swirls on the car? How can I possibly get more agressive than that without going to a wool pad?
So my question is, how do I remove these heavy swirls? I dont want to fill them with anything, I want them gone. I've been planning to give my father's 1992 735iL a good detail in the near future, and it's black and has two years of serious swirl marks. That will be my test bed for any new techniques.
I'd appreciate *any* advice on how to improve my swirl remval skills.
For what it's worth I'm buffing with JT International blue microfibers.