spike
New member
- Nov 1, 2009
- 359
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- Thread starter
- #21
No problem, glad to help! The key is to use a fair amount of water or QD when it starts drying out but with a bit of patience they will come out. Good luck, just remember you can add a bit of pressure in the first few passes and ease up gradually until the last pass or two is under the weight of the machine.
Edit: I think your problem is that you aren't fully breaking down the polish. My first time trying it yielded micro-marring but I realized that you really have to keep going by spritzing the polishing area with water when it dries out until it eventually starts to go clear.
For what its worth; I bought some spare headlights that have glass lenses and were serverly pitted. I figured I would see how far I could take the glass polish both in terms of maximum working time and pressure and it made a night and day difference.
Thank you Christian. I'm glad you clarified on how to keep the polish moist...you know when the polish goes dry, and the flex starts trying to jerk away from you, and it's hard to keep flat? That's what had kept happening to me. I need the water spray bottle for sure. I'd appreciate any more "step-by-step" training you can give (and what you gave me was awesome, BTW), if you have any more tips. I'll try again on it soon-it's back to work time, and back to reality...
These are great tips, and thanks to ALL of you for your help. I'm sure you know how I'm feeling right now, that sense of frustration because you screwed up, and you don't know how to fix it, and that awful "pit-in-your-stomach" feeling when you did a job and throughly sucked at it, and can't seem to fix it...for a detailer (even if it's just as a hobby), leaving something screwed up like this is aggravating, so say the least. But I know that help is just a post away on this forum...how great it is to be able to ask all you pros out there questions, and get help. I really appreciate this forum!! Thanks AG for having it!!