Carbon Blue
New member
I finally had an open weekend to detail my own car with my new makita 9227c
I used the normal 2 stage process of SIP and UF SE. I spread the SIP at 800-900 rpms worked it at about 1200 and then began the polishing at 1500 then slowed back down to 1200 with a white LC pad. At first the pad was skipping all over the place but after a few tries I got the hang of it. When I used my UDM I could work SIP to a complete dust with a slight haze. With the makita it was dusting but it still had that oily residue left on the paint. No matter how long I worked the polish for at 1500 it would not dust as much vs my udm (I didnt want to make more passes for fear of burning through the paint but it was definitely longer than 2-3 mins for a 3x3 area. I pulled the car out into the sun and noticed some very slight buffer trails or light haze left behind.
I then followed up with a grey LC pad with UF SE and used the same speeds as SIP. I got it to finish down pretty well and removed the holgrams/trails (but still left a slight oily residue behind but not as bad as SIP). All pads used in this process were 6.5inches in diameter with about a 4-5inch line of polish down the middle. The weather was at about 57degrees farenheit so Im not too sure if this is a prime example of SIP acting funny or not. Overall im very impressed with the rotary as it corrected much better and faster vs my udm on 4inch pads. The makita at about 1500 actually sounded slow vs the udm at speed 6 plus it vibrated wayyy less than the udm did. The only problem I had was working on vertical surfaces such as the door where the pad would skip all over the place (any tips on this??). I had the speed lock on with my other hand on the head not bail handle of the polisher. I kept it flat at all times and used the polishers weight only. Does my final product look as expected? Does my pic at 1500 look as how its supposed to or should it be more "clear"?
spreading SIP at 8-900
Fully spread and worked at 1200
after a 1500 then burnished back down to about 1000-1200. Should it look like this??
pulled out into the sun to check my work (After a 50/50 IPA wipe down) very VERY slight buffer trails
closer shot of the door with slight buffer trails (cleaned up by UF SE on a grey pad later on)
Front fender received the same treatment as the door

I then followed up with a grey LC pad with UF SE and used the same speeds as SIP. I got it to finish down pretty well and removed the holgrams/trails (but still left a slight oily residue behind but not as bad as SIP). All pads used in this process were 6.5inches in diameter with about a 4-5inch line of polish down the middle. The weather was at about 57degrees farenheit so Im not too sure if this is a prime example of SIP acting funny or not. Overall im very impressed with the rotary as it corrected much better and faster vs my udm on 4inch pads. The makita at about 1500 actually sounded slow vs the udm at speed 6 plus it vibrated wayyy less than the udm did. The only problem I had was working on vertical surfaces such as the door where the pad would skip all over the place (any tips on this??). I had the speed lock on with my other hand on the head not bail handle of the polisher. I kept it flat at all times and used the polishers weight only. Does my final product look as expected? Does my pic at 1500 look as how its supposed to or should it be more "clear"?

spreading SIP at 8-900

Fully spread and worked at 1200

after a 1500 then burnished back down to about 1000-1200. Should it look like this??

pulled out into the sun to check my work (After a 50/50 IPA wipe down) very VERY slight buffer trails

closer shot of the door with slight buffer trails (cleaned up by UF SE on a grey pad later on)

Front fender received the same treatment as the door