I'm thinking of getting the GG 3" DA with CCS 4" pads and am wondering if it will not be worth the smaller size to do a whole car with. Would I be better just getting the PC with the 5" plate and use the 5.5" pads and do the parts I can't get with the DA with my hand?
As FinalTouchAuto states, trying to do an entire car with just 4" pads would take longer than most people would like to invest time-wise. They are handy for thin panels to stay between body lines, to get around tight areas or for really curving panels.
From this thread,
1994 Porsche Detailed for "Operation Comfort" Modeled by Brittany from Stuart, Florida
Wolfgang Total Swirl Remover
I used the 4" pad around the B-piller, around the windows, the front and rear bumpers and some of the other curvy, tight areas.
To work on the paint under the whale tail, I used the Griot's Garage 3" Mini Polisher...
The paint around the louvers and the louvers were the most difficult areas to work on and while the paint was greatly improved in this area there are still deeper scratches remaining that can be removed but will require more time to work out carefully by hand or machine...
If I work on this car again in the future I'll either have the owner check into having the black grill removed or I'll have to do it myself so that there's no risk of causing any damage to the grill or getting splatter on it from multiple machine polishing steps...
Most of the time when I look at areas like this detailed before me I find spatter or
the other guy's wax...
Polishing and sealing were both done with the red finishing/waxing pads offered by Griot's Garage for their 3" Mini Polisher.
I thought the GG 3" was only for 3" inch pads? I've been missing a lot of good discussion around here.
It is. It's not going to be effective with any larger size foam pads. A person
might be able to do some correction work using a 4" SurBuf pad.
The Griot's 3" Mini Polisher can do some pretty amazing work but it does require using good technique...
Griot's Garage 3" Mini Polisher - Extreme Demo - Warning!
Without further ado...
The polisher on the left is the first generation, the polisher on the right is the new Generation II Griot's Garage 3" Mini Polisher. I chose the Wolfgang Twins because they are both very wet products and you need hyper-lubricity to help aid in pad rotation when removing below surface defects, or in other words to remove a little paint.
Meguiar's #2000 Nikken Finishing Papers were used to give me an extreme test section and I used the Griot's Garage foam polishing and waxing pads for sanding mark removal and final polishing.
Not pictured is the Detailers Pride Max Wax which I applied after polishing
One section of the test hood was thoroughly wet-sanded using Nikken #2000 Finishing Papers
(More pictures in the article)
In the thread below you can find some detailed pictures of DA Polishers with 3.5" backing plates and 4" pads...
3.5" Backing Plates and 4" Spot Repair Pads on DA Polishers
Here's the 3" Griot's Polishing Pad inside the groove of a 1964 Ford Falcon - Be careful because of the mass of the polisher poised over a tiny pad it's kind of "tippy".