Sonus SwirlBusterâ„¢

The SwirlBuster pad works great with a rotary. I used it to polish out my demo display and I used it to remove water spots from the Cayenne. I was impressed with how well it works. The pad works best at 1200 to 1500 RPM.



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DavidB said:
No. I use the pad with Sonus SFX-1 Restore, Sonus SFX-2 Enhance and the new Sonus SwirlBuster Clearcoat Polish with great results.



The SwirlBuster polish is based on Sonus SFX-2 with the addition of two new chemicals (the acrylic polymers and the activator).



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David, kudoes to your new polish (and to you). It sounds truelly impressive!



If you where to take a stab at it, how abrasive would the SBP be on the Megs scale? 4, like #80? 5? :nixweiss
 
same here. I'll be buying as soon as its released. Thought it was supposed to be the first of the month, but apparently it was pushed back.
 
Mike,



I will be able to give a better report on availability on Monday. With my vacation and the manufacturing problem we had, the date got thrown way off. I have the latest sample from the chemist and simply need to put it to test to give the thumbs-up.



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DavidB said:
The SwirlBuster pad works great with a rotary. I used it to polish out my demo display and I used it to remove water spots from the Cayenne. I was impressed with how well it works. The pad works best at 1200 to 1500 RPM.



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This wasn't exactly my experience although I had the RPMs less than that most of the time. The pad does a nice job at defect removal but I got hologramming in the shape of those pockets on the pad on the paint. I used the recommended amount of polish. I'll try it again, this time at those RPMs and with more consistent pressure.





If someone experiences the same, no need for panic. Simply follow with a white LC pad and your polish ( Optimum in my case here) @ 1000 RPMs and that will get them out.





The way I see it, regarding rotary usage, is that it would be better if a version of the pad without pockets was available. I don't do much paint correction by PC but maybe with its dual action, the pockets contribute much better.
 
It's been ages since I used the Meg's burgundy pad but I'm pretty sure the SwirlBuster is softer, yet does the job a lot more effectively. If it weren't for those holograms in the form of the pockets in the pad, I'd say it's a pretty good compounding and polishing pad all in one. Even with the hologramming, when using Optimum, it does leave a better finish than the Meg's burgundy alone. It is quite clear and bright.



If I learn how to eliminate the hologramming, I would say the SwirlBuster is definitely worth trying out. Having to follow with the white LC pad at present is the only minor inconvenience.
 
Bill D said:
This wasn't exactly my experience although I had the RPMs less than that most of the time. The pad does a nice job at defect removal but I got hologramming in the shape of those pockets on the pad on the paint. I used the recommended amount of polish. I'll try it again, this time at those RPMs and with more consistent pressure.





If someone experiences the same, no need for panic. Simply follow with a white LC pad and your polish ( Optimum in my case here) @ 1000 RPMs and that will get them out.





The way I see it, regarding rotary usage, is that it would be better if a version of the pad without pockets was available. I don't do much paint correction by PC but maybe with its dual action, the pockets contribute much better.

Have you tried the new SSB polish with a traditional SFX-2 pad? Perhaps the alleged flaw is the new grooved pad?
 
Spartacus, not to speak for Bill, but I believe you misunderstood his post. AFAIK, the Swirlbuster Polish is not out yet, Bill was just using the pad, so his comments were directed at the pad.
 
My thoughts exactly, it's the grooves in the pads via rotary, at least at the speed I tried it ( 1000 RPMs per instructions right with the pad), that caused the holgramming. If they didn't happen, the pad would've totally corrected very well. Probably just a learning curve.
 
Bill D said:
My thoughts exactly, it's the grooves in the pads via rotary, at least at the speed I tried it ( 1000 RPMs per instructions right with the pad), that caused the holgramming. If they didn't happen, the pad would've totally corrected very well. Probably just a learning curve.

OH... so you're using a rotary not a random orbital?
 
Yep, according to the literature of the product, it can be used on both. Hopefully I'll figure out what to do to avoid the hologramming. I'll try raising the RPMs, as I see David B mentioned he used it a little bit higher, and put some pressure on the pad. It is a bit thicker than what I'm used to using.
 
Bill D said:
Yep, according to the literature of the product, it can be used on both. Hopefully I'll figure out what to do to avoid the hologramming. I'll try raising the RPMs, as I see David B mentioned he used it a little bit higher, and put some pressure on the pad. It is a bit thicker than what I'm used to using.

I'd be curious to see if the hologramming still occured with a PC7424. :nixweiss
 
Hey guys, I'm in the warehouse today, so I won't have opportunity to fully comment until a bit later.



The pad was specifically designed for DA, but I did extensive testing with my rotary on two different vehicles. I experienced so hologram issues when used with SFX-1, but the holograms polished out very nicely with SFX-2 and the SwirlBuster polish.



I used a lot of pressure with my rotary and more speed than recommended to test for "abusive use". I discovered that under to much pressure the pad runs dry, which caused more hologram marks. I resolved this issue by wetting the pad with detail spray before loading with polish.



I also discovered that the pad really likes speed. When I ran the pad at 1800 to 2000 RPM, I got very nice gloss with SFX-2, however, it was still necessary to do a final pass with a white SFX pad and SFX-2 or SFX-3 polish. With the SwirlBuster polish, this was not necessary. The extra lubrication and acrylic sealant in the polish gives a very nice final finish.
 
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