RaskyR1
Rasky's Auto Detailing
Accumulator said:RaskyR1- Interesting that M80 (via Flex no less) was an OK follow up to M01.
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How so? It's a medium polish followed by a light polish.
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Accumulator said:RaskyR1- Interesting that M80 (via Flex no less) was an OK follow up to M01.
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Accumulator said:Rob Tomlin- Well, I sure wouldn't do anything that won't really make a difference, especially at this point.
Glad to hear you got a handle on things, and that the paint was thick enough to withstand what you needed to do.
Actually, it sounds to me like you're making good progress for the time invested.
Atlantic Euro said:I'd bet you can bring the lacquer back farther than you think without wetsanding.
RaskyR1 said:How so? It's a medium polish followed by a light polish.
Rob Tomlin said:Not even close.
We specifically concentrated on one area of the car to see how far we could get just using an aggressive compound/pad combo (m95 with wool pad). It simply was not working. The paint had far too many issues. Not only did compounding not work, but 2000 grit paper wasn't enough, so we wound up using 1200!
Accumulator said:I would consider M01 more aggressive than that (he "Medium" cut in the name carries no weight with me)...I can see doing M02 then M80, but I'd expect M01/M80 to be too big jump. Just guessing though as I've never used M01. M02 finished out well enough to be followed with M80 *if* it was worked properly, but otherwise even it was a big on the coarse side IME. And of course the paint in question always factors in...
Accumulator said:RaskyR1- OK, roger that. I do want to try that wool Solo pad.
I think I'm just prone to making smaller jumps than many do, and yeah...that often means I'm doing more steps. I don't even like doing a M105/cutting-to-M205/finishing jump.
Accumulator said:RaskyR1- OK, roger that. I do want to try that wool Solo pad.
I think I'm just prone to making smaller jumps than many do, and yeah...that often means I'm doing more steps. I don't even like doing a M105/cutting-to-M205/finishing jump.
Generally speaking, spending more time upfront in the sanding step where you continually refine your sanding marks to be more and more shallow equals less and less work buffing out the sanding marks. And keep this in mind, wet-sanding is cool , machine compounding is warm and in most cases hot especially if you're using a rotary buffer with a wool pad and a compound. I add this tidbit because clear coat paints don't tend to like hot temperatures. Warm is okay but hot is not. (Hey that rhymes).
Mike Phillips said:To my eyes, this looks like a cheap re-paint somewhere in it's history...
Old lacquer paint oxidizes and turns white, this looks like bad prep-work and actual cheap, or inexpensive paint on the car.
I could be wrong because I'm not standing there looking at it but that's what it looks like.
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Rob Tomlin said:BTW, I find it interesting that you mention M105. I was told by a couple different people that it wasn't the best choice for lacquer.
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