Hi everyone,
I just bought a Griots 6" ROP and some LC Hydro-tech low-profile pads for it. I was out putting them to use last night working on a BMW (very hard paint) and noticed that after about 1/4th of the car the hydro-tech pad was starting to tear.
I work very slowly and carefully, and while I haven't buffed out 1000 cars like some of the members here, I am confident I am using proper technique. Here is the procedure I follow:
Products:
Griots Garage 6" ROP with Lake Country 5.5" Backing Plate
HT Cyan 5.5" Low Profile Pad
Meguiars Ultimate Compound
Method:
- Prime Pad with UC
- Place UC in a thin ring along the outside of the pad
- Put down onto paint, run machine on speed 5
- Working in approximately 20x20" areas, and make 6-8 passes over these sections.
After each section I clean the pad as best as I can (which from the looks of it is pretty well). I wrap my finger around a microfiber towel and press it into the pad while running the machine on speed 4 (any faster and it hurts my finger). This seems to really clear out all the spent product out of the pad. I tried with a terry cloth as Mike Phillips suggested but my terrys were just lint machines so I went to some microfibers.
After doing the hood and the front bumper with the same pad, I removed it from the backing plate (very gently, as the new LC backing plate has VERY strong velcro), this is what I found starting to happen on the pad:
I do have 2 more cyan pads that I haven't used yet, and was planning on using them for the rest of the car I'm working on, but I would like to ascertain if there is a flaw in my technique that is causing excess pad wear before I do.
Obviously it's not completely ruined yet, but if this wear continues this pad is going to be done for after 1-2 cars. I've done a few cars with a PC7424 and Meguiars Soft Buff pads and those still look brand new -- I work very carefully and methodically. If this is the normal lifespan of these pads unfortunately I will have to look elsewhere, as my detailing dollars are limited as a college student.
I just bought a Griots 6" ROP and some LC Hydro-tech low-profile pads for it. I was out putting them to use last night working on a BMW (very hard paint) and noticed that after about 1/4th of the car the hydro-tech pad was starting to tear.
I work very slowly and carefully, and while I haven't buffed out 1000 cars like some of the members here, I am confident I am using proper technique. Here is the procedure I follow:
Products:
Griots Garage 6" ROP with Lake Country 5.5" Backing Plate
HT Cyan 5.5" Low Profile Pad
Meguiars Ultimate Compound
Method:
- Prime Pad with UC
- Place UC in a thin ring along the outside of the pad
- Put down onto paint, run machine on speed 5
- Working in approximately 20x20" areas, and make 6-8 passes over these sections.
After each section I clean the pad as best as I can (which from the looks of it is pretty well). I wrap my finger around a microfiber towel and press it into the pad while running the machine on speed 4 (any faster and it hurts my finger). This seems to really clear out all the spent product out of the pad. I tried with a terry cloth as Mike Phillips suggested but my terrys were just lint machines so I went to some microfibers.
After doing the hood and the front bumper with the same pad, I removed it from the backing plate (very gently, as the new LC backing plate has VERY strong velcro), this is what I found starting to happen on the pad:


I do have 2 more cyan pads that I haven't used yet, and was planning on using them for the rest of the car I'm working on, but I would like to ascertain if there is a flaw in my technique that is causing excess pad wear before I do.
Obviously it's not completely ruined yet, but if this wear continues this pad is going to be done for after 1-2 cars. I've done a few cars with a PC7424 and Meguiars Soft Buff pads and those still look brand new -- I work very carefully and methodically. If this is the normal lifespan of these pads unfortunately I will have to look elsewhere, as my detailing dollars are limited as a college student.