mwoywod
New member
- Apr 3, 2016
- 881
- 0
For the past year I've been using Jim White's (White Details) method for containing my spent compound and polish residue.
For those of you who aren't familiar, Jim uses a 5 gallon bucket and mists the sides of the bucket to catch the spent residue that is removed from pads when using compressed air.
Problems with using a 5 gallon bucket.....
View attachment 60495
-Because a 5 gallon bucket is too shallow, occasionally I'd blow out my pad and a mixture of water, spent compound, and paint would shoot back up into my face.
-I had to use a putty knife to scrape all the residue off the sides of the bucket and into the trash, which was a massive pain in the a$$ and took me an extra 5-10 minutes every day just to simply clean out my bucket.
-I was constantly knocking my bucket over with hoses and extension cords which was extremely annoying.
New Method
View attachment 60496
View attachment 60497
This 20 gallon brute trash is the perfect size and it's ONLY used for my residue control. I still mist the inside of the trash can with water but I am able to contain much more of my spent compound and polish AND rather than cleaning it out with a putty knife every day, at the end of the week I can just throw away the trash bag and put in a new one. (The cheapest/thinnest trash bags I could find work great)
Also, because it's on casters it's easy to roll around the vehicle which is another bonus!
Residue control is the most important aspects of paint correction and because 90% of the cars I am sanding and polishing are actually painted with softer single stage paints, I really have to keep my pads clean. Hope someone finds this interesting! Any thought or ideas are ALWAYS welcome. Hope you guys have a great weekend!!
For those of you who aren't familiar, Jim uses a 5 gallon bucket and mists the sides of the bucket to catch the spent residue that is removed from pads when using compressed air.
Problems with using a 5 gallon bucket.....
View attachment 60495
-Because a 5 gallon bucket is too shallow, occasionally I'd blow out my pad and a mixture of water, spent compound, and paint would shoot back up into my face.
-I had to use a putty knife to scrape all the residue off the sides of the bucket and into the trash, which was a massive pain in the a$$ and took me an extra 5-10 minutes every day just to simply clean out my bucket.
-I was constantly knocking my bucket over with hoses and extension cords which was extremely annoying.
New Method
View attachment 60496
View attachment 60497
This 20 gallon brute trash is the perfect size and it's ONLY used for my residue control. I still mist the inside of the trash can with water but I am able to contain much more of my spent compound and polish AND rather than cleaning it out with a putty knife every day, at the end of the week I can just throw away the trash bag and put in a new one. (The cheapest/thinnest trash bags I could find work great)
Also, because it's on casters it's easy to roll around the vehicle which is another bonus!
Residue control is the most important aspects of paint correction and because 90% of the cars I am sanding and polishing are actually painted with softer single stage paints, I really have to keep my pads clean. Hope someone finds this interesting! Any thought or ideas are ALWAYS welcome. Hope you guys have a great weekend!!