SuperBuick
Member
I recently purchased both Optimum Polish and Optimum compound to "refill" my polish stock, which consisted of Menzerna IP and FPII. Based on the reviews and results posted here, it seemed like a viable alternative, and I enjoy trying new products, so I decided to try them.
Last night, I removed the cover off of my Silver 2007 Corvette as I was intending on putting on a second coat of UPP. I took the cover off, inspected for any micromarring from the cover, and found a little bit on the top part of the hood - no big deal I thought, I'll polish those right out with the Optimum Polish and a white pad, and be on my merry way. I shook up my brand new bottle of OP, pulled out a brand new 4" white spot buffs pad, attached it to my porter-cable, lubed the pad with a spritz of QD, applied a small amount of polish, spread it over the area (approx 1 foot x 1 foot), and began polishing. The polish had a nice feel to it and good working time. Then I pulled out a new (but washed once with Micro Restore) MF towel from Properautocare and wiped off the polish. What I saw was a nightmare. The optimum polish left strong hazing that could be seen under incandescent lighting (not under flourescent though) and the slight micromarring was still there.
I pulled out the Optimum Compound, a new Orange 4" pad, and lubed/spread/etc. (same process as above) and tried this to see if it would cut the marring (I thought maybe I had done something wrong, that maybe a piece of sand or dust or something had jumped up off the ground and onto my pad at the last second before I started polishing). After the using the Optimum Compound, the results were worse. The hazing was more evident and the swirling got worse.
At this point I was very frustrated at the thought of having just turned a section of my hood on a car with 200 miles into swirl/haze city. I pulled out a new white pad and applied Menzerna FPII. I worked the FPII as I normally do, and after wiping off nearly all the haze/swirling that was caused when I used Optimum Polish/Compound was gone. At this point I was a bit tired so I re-covered the car and headed to bed, but I'm still very confused and upset about the Optimum Polish/Compound.
I can't figure out why these products worked so awfully on this paint - Corvettes are known for having clear coat that is 50x harder than diamond (
), but I wouldn't expect a reputable polish such as Optimum to turn it into a swirly, hazy mess. I'm lucky that I had some Menzerna left, but I honestly thought these products were pretty equal to eachother. Did I perhaps get a bad batch of both OP AND OC? (pretty unlikely) Do they not play well with 4" pads? Are they just no good for Corvettes (anyone else use them on a newer Corvette?)
I've tried to think of all the variables that could have caused the swirling - but after using the same type of pads, the same process, and the same MF towel with the FPII, the only changing variable is the polish itself...
Help me out - I WANT to trust that OP/OC will work fine, but I'm far too leery to use it on any of my customers' cars after last night...
Last night, I removed the cover off of my Silver 2007 Corvette as I was intending on putting on a second coat of UPP. I took the cover off, inspected for any micromarring from the cover, and found a little bit on the top part of the hood - no big deal I thought, I'll polish those right out with the Optimum Polish and a white pad, and be on my merry way. I shook up my brand new bottle of OP, pulled out a brand new 4" white spot buffs pad, attached it to my porter-cable, lubed the pad with a spritz of QD, applied a small amount of polish, spread it over the area (approx 1 foot x 1 foot), and began polishing. The polish had a nice feel to it and good working time. Then I pulled out a new (but washed once with Micro Restore) MF towel from Properautocare and wiped off the polish. What I saw was a nightmare. The optimum polish left strong hazing that could be seen under incandescent lighting (not under flourescent though) and the slight micromarring was still there.
I pulled out the Optimum Compound, a new Orange 4" pad, and lubed/spread/etc. (same process as above) and tried this to see if it would cut the marring (I thought maybe I had done something wrong, that maybe a piece of sand or dust or something had jumped up off the ground and onto my pad at the last second before I started polishing). After the using the Optimum Compound, the results were worse. The hazing was more evident and the swirling got worse.
At this point I was very frustrated at the thought of having just turned a section of my hood on a car with 200 miles into swirl/haze city. I pulled out a new white pad and applied Menzerna FPII. I worked the FPII as I normally do, and after wiping off nearly all the haze/swirling that was caused when I used Optimum Polish/Compound was gone. At this point I was a bit tired so I re-covered the car and headed to bed, but I'm still very confused and upset about the Optimum Polish/Compound.
I can't figure out why these products worked so awfully on this paint - Corvettes are known for having clear coat that is 50x harder than diamond (

I've tried to think of all the variables that could have caused the swirling - but after using the same type of pads, the same process, and the same MF towel with the FPII, the only changing variable is the polish itself...
Help me out - I WANT to trust that OP/OC will work fine, but I'm far too leery to use it on any of my customers' cars after last night...