When I learned to buff (as they used to call it I guess), everything was wool, high speed, and aggressive products. It was easy then to damage a finish with burns and swirls if you weren't careful.
Today, with the slower rotary speeds, the foam pads, and the versatile compounds and polishes, you'd have to be pretty care less to really damage a vehicle with a rotary.
With that being said, why use a DA? Seems like a rotary is much more effective at getting the jobs done and much faster as well.
I'm not knocking the DA polishers because I've never used one. I'm just curious as to why it seems more people use them than an actual rotary polisher.
Today, with the slower rotary speeds, the foam pads, and the versatile compounds and polishes, you'd have to be pretty care less to really damage a vehicle with a rotary.
With that being said, why use a DA? Seems like a rotary is much more effective at getting the jobs done and much faster as well.
I'm not knocking the DA polishers because I've never used one. I'm just curious as to why it seems more people use them than an actual rotary polisher.