SuperBee364
New member
Heavy compounds have always been a pain in the butt. They leave hazey paint, swirls, holograms, dust alot, etc. etc. Out of all the heavy compounds, my favorites were HTEC cut with OP, and MPG. MPG dusts like crazy, doesn't cut as well as most, but it has a decent working time and finishes off pretty well.
Then along comes Meguairs with M105 and M95. There's been a ton of info here about M105, but not much about M95.
Megs says that M95 cuts as well as M105, but works like a "traditional compound"; you have to work it til it breaks down and goes clear, where as with M105, you are *extremely* limited on working time.
My car has some pretty good defects on the horizontal surfaces that came with the car at no extra charge. I've resisted going after them until today. I just couldn't let that brand new bottle of M95 sit there on the shelf...
So I grabbed a PFW and got after it. I was truly impressed. M95 really *does* work like a traditional polish. You gotta keep working it until it goes clear. At 1500 RPM with a PFW, that works out to about a minute or slightly more. If you stop too early, you won't get the finish that M95 is capable of giving. Which is, to say the least, impressive. M95 doesn't seem to have quite the cutting power as 105 does, but it leaves every bit as good of a finish, if not better. As unbelieveable as it may seem, M95 finishes down as well as SIP does. And it's much easier to use, too. It isn't a replacement for SIP, though, it has waaaay more firepower to it than SIP does. It would definitely be overkill on medium defects. Meg's rates this a 12/12 on their cutting scale.
I skipped the usual finishing wool today, as I wanted to see how good the results would be if I went right from M95 to PO85RD on a red foam pad. I wanted to see if such a gentle jeweling polish/finessing pad combination would be able to clean up successfully after M95. I always do 2 applications of jeweling polish. After the second application, I pulled the car out into the sun for a thorough inspection. No swirls, no holograms, no haze. Nothing but perfectly corrected gloss. So at least on this car's CC, going from M95 right to the most gentle jeweling process worked perfectly.
Meguairs just blew all the other heavy hitters out of the water. IMHO, M95 and M105 have re-defined the heavy compound category and set the new standard. Guess I'll put all the other bottles of compound down in the storage room.
Then along comes Meguairs with M105 and M95. There's been a ton of info here about M105, but not much about M95.
Megs says that M95 cuts as well as M105, but works like a "traditional compound"; you have to work it til it breaks down and goes clear, where as with M105, you are *extremely* limited on working time.
My car has some pretty good defects on the horizontal surfaces that came with the car at no extra charge. I've resisted going after them until today. I just couldn't let that brand new bottle of M95 sit there on the shelf...
So I grabbed a PFW and got after it. I was truly impressed. M95 really *does* work like a traditional polish. You gotta keep working it until it goes clear. At 1500 RPM with a PFW, that works out to about a minute or slightly more. If you stop too early, you won't get the finish that M95 is capable of giving. Which is, to say the least, impressive. M95 doesn't seem to have quite the cutting power as 105 does, but it leaves every bit as good of a finish, if not better. As unbelieveable as it may seem, M95 finishes down as well as SIP does. And it's much easier to use, too. It isn't a replacement for SIP, though, it has waaaay more firepower to it than SIP does. It would definitely be overkill on medium defects. Meg's rates this a 12/12 on their cutting scale.
I skipped the usual finishing wool today, as I wanted to see how good the results would be if I went right from M95 to PO85RD on a red foam pad. I wanted to see if such a gentle jeweling polish/finessing pad combination would be able to clean up successfully after M95. I always do 2 applications of jeweling polish. After the second application, I pulled the car out into the sun for a thorough inspection. No swirls, no holograms, no haze. Nothing but perfectly corrected gloss. So at least on this car's CC, going from M95 right to the most gentle jeweling process worked perfectly.
Meguairs just blew all the other heavy hitters out of the water. IMHO, M95 and M105 have re-defined the heavy compound category and set the new standard. Guess I'll put all the other bottles of compound down in the storage room.