Mike@ShineStruck
New member
- Apr 17, 2015
- 1,482
- 0
Here's my personal experience..
I find the long throws to cut faster on flat and slight curves.. with Deep curves you can attack 1 of 3 ways.. (1)either approach curve with massage technique,(2)attack from top up to curve/crease, followed by bottom to crease/curve, or (3)switch to smaller D/A or flex.
flex on curves will just spin.
car completion time, they end up about the same where it wouldn't even matter or dictate to use one over the other in that aspect..
regarding techniques..
For smooth operation they have the same technique. You need to keep the polisher level to insure pad is flat on panel...if not flat each machine experiences a different effect.
flex 3401 will experience walk while the long stroke will experience a stall on curves, or perhaps wobble on flat with a stiff pad..
The Flex likes pressure , while long stroke just needs weight of machine for cutting.
I use the long stroke as its smooth, you don't feel fatigued after a job or two(no using downward machine pressure, less vibration in general, no walk to control), and the results will be your body will love you longer as vibration will ultimately mess your nerves up.
with that said, a detailer will typically be biased towards the machine they feel most proficient with due to being the one they use the most.
Every detailer should ideally own one of every style to achieve the most rounded skill set possible, but thats not always plausible for various reasons per end user.
all and all use what you prefer and detail on! :-D
I find the long throws to cut faster on flat and slight curves.. with Deep curves you can attack 1 of 3 ways.. (1)either approach curve with massage technique,(2)attack from top up to curve/crease, followed by bottom to crease/curve, or (3)switch to smaller D/A or flex.
flex on curves will just spin.
car completion time, they end up about the same where it wouldn't even matter or dictate to use one over the other in that aspect..
regarding techniques..
For smooth operation they have the same technique. You need to keep the polisher level to insure pad is flat on panel...if not flat each machine experiences a different effect.
flex 3401 will experience walk while the long stroke will experience a stall on curves, or perhaps wobble on flat with a stiff pad..
The Flex likes pressure , while long stroke just needs weight of machine for cutting.
I use the long stroke as its smooth, you don't feel fatigued after a job or two(no using downward machine pressure, less vibration in general, no walk to control), and the results will be your body will love you longer as vibration will ultimately mess your nerves up.
with that said, a detailer will typically be biased towards the machine they feel most proficient with due to being the one they use the most.
Every detailer should ideally own one of every style to achieve the most rounded skill set possible, but thats not always plausible for various reasons per end user.
all and all use what you prefer and detail on! :-D