A DA type polisher does have its limits compared to a rotary.
Agree.
What I've noticed ever since the online detailing world discovered the Porter Cable Dual Action Polisher is that the trend is to push the limits to what this tool can do.
Usually, people try to do a job that would be best accomplished with a rotary buffer but instead use a DA Polisher.
Since the DA type tools have increased on the market, the "tearing" action the machine does on the pads is my obstacle.
This is why sometimes I'll describe the action of a DA polisher as
violent, because at the 5.0 and especially the 6.0 speed settings, there's a very
violent action taking place to the foam. To put this action in simple terms,
Does the violent action help pads to get better and better?
or
Does the violent action cause the pads to get worse and worse?
Pretty easy to figure that one out.
The only thing that bothers me about this thread, is that prior to this, I was never notified about a defective product. I stand behind my product and was never heard anything, until it was posted on the forum.
For those of you that have never met Eric, let me speak on his behalf. I met met Eric at SEMA this year and he's as nice and polite in person as his posts on this forum demonstrate him to be.
In a perfect world, if you send someone samples to test out, unless the testers were instructed to post their results to a public forum no matter what they were, then the right thing to do would be to first contact the person that supplied the test samples just as a professional courtesy. In most cases your results or experience will still go to a forum but at least the person that supplied the free samples will receive a heads-up via a phone call or an e-mail versus a thread on a forum.
There's a learning curve to life so no harm done, but for anyone reading this, in the future if a company offers to send you free samples to test out, check with them and see what they want you to do as far as discussing your findings.
I would guess that most manufactures would like you to contact them if there are any problems because it could be the testing is to find problems and fix them before going public with the product. Bypassing this just hurts the manufacture that was actually in the process of perfecting a product, not releasing a product that wasn't ready for public consumption.
A responsible company like Lake Country will take any feedback they get, positive or negative and then let that feedback help steer the direction of a products development.
It's just a matter of following good protocols and courtesy to make free samples a
win/win deal for everyone.
Again, there's a learning curve to life and a learning curve to working with manufactures, so no blame being cast in this reply, just an attempt to bring some balance and closure to this discussion.
Thank you Eric for chiming in on this thread and all the other things you do for this hobby as well as being a genuine car guy...
:dblthumb2: