mpmiller37
New member
- Aug 9, 2008
- 5
- 1
I've been using a DA polisher (porter cable 7424) for years without issue, though I wanted to try something to do some paint correction and get the job done faster. So I bought a rotary at harbor freight with speed from 1500-3500. I also bought some products: Meg DA microfiber correction compound and some MF cutting discs, also some Meg M100 and a wool pad. I also have some foam pads. I have an old 2007 Ridgeline and the paint looks pretty good but it has alot of minor scratches and water marks that seem embedded in the clear coat. I tried various combinations of pads (MF discs, the wool, and foam) with the correction compound and the M100. Results ...
1. The products did not correct what I expected them to and I was fairly aggressive with speed and polishing time, but the finish is shiny. Didn't damage anything and no swirl marks (which surprises me because I thought rotary with wool was dangerous).
2. Very messy, I watched videos on how to apply product etc. but polish still seemed to go everywhere.
3. Working time was short. The correction compound dusted quickly. The M100 was a bit longer.
4. Biggest complaint: the machine would wobble and pull quite a bit such that my arms were trashed. I tried slower speeds which didn't help, and ended up doing most of the truck at 3500. The foam pad seemed to be the smoothest to work with, so I stayed with that. I wanted to use more product but didn't want it flying everywhere, but I really wanted the machine to do the work without jumping/pulling and trashing my arms.
Is this typical? Can anyone tell me what I might have been doing wrong or provide tips for a better rotary experience? My objective was some paint correction with less effort in a timely fashion (work smarter not harder) but it was very hard work.
Thanks for the help ... Mike
1. The products did not correct what I expected them to and I was fairly aggressive with speed and polishing time, but the finish is shiny. Didn't damage anything and no swirl marks (which surprises me because I thought rotary with wool was dangerous).
2. Very messy, I watched videos on how to apply product etc. but polish still seemed to go everywhere.
3. Working time was short. The correction compound dusted quickly. The M100 was a bit longer.
4. Biggest complaint: the machine would wobble and pull quite a bit such that my arms were trashed. I tried slower speeds which didn't help, and ended up doing most of the truck at 3500. The foam pad seemed to be the smoothest to work with, so I stayed with that. I wanted to use more product but didn't want it flying everywhere, but I really wanted the machine to do the work without jumping/pulling and trashing my arms.
Is this typical? Can anyone tell me what I might have been doing wrong or provide tips for a better rotary experience? My objective was some paint correction with less effort in a timely fashion (work smarter not harder) but it was very hard work.
Thanks for the help ... Mike