tom p.
Active member
I spent some time this weekend trying to polish my wheels while they are off the car during the winter season. I cleaned the wheels a week ago so I "thought" I was starting with clean wheels…this was not a cleaning task, but a polishing task. It turns out that the first set of wheels soiled my polishing pad a fair amount. The second set of wheels from the wife’s car was downright toxic in terms of embedded contamination. I was amazed how dirty the pad was when I finished up; both cars are fitted with lo-dusting pads.
I used the Makita on a very low speed with a small 4” Edge pad. I started off on my wheels with Meg’s #205 but shifted to Meg’s D151 as it left a nicer gloss. I think the D151 leaves a little bit of protection on the surface. I used the DP one-step sealant on the rear side of the wheels, I didn’t apply anything to the face of the wheels. The DP sealant really glossed up the rear side of the wheel. The surface of the wheels is glass-like now, it's that smooth.
These are "after" shots:
These are the wheels off the wife's car, car is about 6 years old. I could only polish the face of the wheel. The spokes are too tight to fit the polishing pad in between. I was able to improve the gloss a bit on this set of wheels, but the finish on the newer wheels is quite a bit nicer. The wheel mfr may be using a different process now.
The Edge pad was dirty by the time I finished this 2nd set of wheels:
I spent about 1hr on each set of wheels. I'll likely make it a point to do this each year to minimize the build-up of surface contaminants.
I used the Makita on a very low speed with a small 4” Edge pad. I started off on my wheels with Meg’s #205 but shifted to Meg’s D151 as it left a nicer gloss. I think the D151 leaves a little bit of protection on the surface. I used the DP one-step sealant on the rear side of the wheels, I didn’t apply anything to the face of the wheels. The DP sealant really glossed up the rear side of the wheel. The surface of the wheels is glass-like now, it's that smooth.

These are "after" shots:




These are the wheels off the wife's car, car is about 6 years old. I could only polish the face of the wheel. The spokes are too tight to fit the polishing pad in between. I was able to improve the gloss a bit on this set of wheels, but the finish on the newer wheels is quite a bit nicer. The wheel mfr may be using a different process now.

The Edge pad was dirty by the time I finished this 2nd set of wheels:

I spent about 1hr on each set of wheels. I'll likely make it a point to do this each year to minimize the build-up of surface contaminants.