I have been washing and waxing cars for over fifty years, but in the last couple of months monitoring this forum and reading Mike Phillip's books, I realize I am a total noob. I always wanted a buffer and almost bought a PC earlier this year. I held off and did more research. I ended up with a Rupes 21 Mk II and a 75E (one of the packages here on AG). I am glad I bit the bullet and splurged a little (er, a lot, I guess). I am getting the hang of the process and and have worked on three cars now. I did my son's 08 Acura with HD Force one-step and was shocked at the results. Actually we did it together. Me on the 75E and he on the big one. Double-teaming it worked great; we knocked it out quickly, including claying the car, which it needed.
Here's my question. I have a '14 Lexus GS350 in silver-just got it with 25K miles. Very clean inside and out. Despite it looking "nice and shiny", closer inspection reveals what I call "microscratches" and "micropits". They don't show up with a "swirl finder light" but with fluorescent and a low angle (near parallel to surface) you can see the defects. Again, you have to look for them, but it bothers me (OCD...). The main problem area is the rear deck and roof. The hood, strangely, is good, and so are the sides of the car.
So, being a cautious beginner I started with the Rupes yellow pad and Keramik. It improved the gloss but the defects were still there. Next, I went with a UHS pad and compound. I then saw some improvement, but still not there. The next step was the Rupes green pad and compound. I then saw some real improvement. So, I then hit the rear deck with the yellow...then white pad with the extra fine compound and Blackfire Wet Diamond LSP. It does look excellent, but I am not satisfied. So..I have ordered a couple blue pad and the Rupes blue compound. I never thought I would need the sharp end of the stick so I did not have those materials.
Should I try the blue pad/compound on a test spot and see what's what? Or find a good psychiatrist that specializes in OCD car enthusiasts? The latter would be cheaper if I screw up the paint on a fairly expensive car.
Jeff
Here's my question. I have a '14 Lexus GS350 in silver-just got it with 25K miles. Very clean inside and out. Despite it looking "nice and shiny", closer inspection reveals what I call "microscratches" and "micropits". They don't show up with a "swirl finder light" but with fluorescent and a low angle (near parallel to surface) you can see the defects. Again, you have to look for them, but it bothers me (OCD...). The main problem area is the rear deck and roof. The hood, strangely, is good, and so are the sides of the car.
So, being a cautious beginner I started with the Rupes yellow pad and Keramik. It improved the gloss but the defects were still there. Next, I went with a UHS pad and compound. I then saw some improvement, but still not there. The next step was the Rupes green pad and compound. I then saw some real improvement. So, I then hit the rear deck with the yellow...then white pad with the extra fine compound and Blackfire Wet Diamond LSP. It does look excellent, but I am not satisfied. So..I have ordered a couple blue pad and the Rupes blue compound. I never thought I would need the sharp end of the stick so I did not have those materials.
Should I try the blue pad/compound on a test spot and see what's what? Or find a good psychiatrist that specializes in OCD car enthusiasts? The latter would be cheaper if I screw up the paint on a fairly expensive car.
Jeff