I stopped at 400 grit. Thought about 600 but figured I would try it quick after the 400 and it seemed to clean it up nice.
80 is the lowest that I'll utilize. Usually stop at 600. And 800 if the piece is soft and I want to jump to tripoli or stainless bar.
I tried mothers and Zephyr Pro-40. I've been in many OEM engine compartments that have a clear coat sprayed over everything. Ram's with a Cummins are one example.
Mothers is perfect when used as intended. If you would have hit it with scotch brite first, you would have seen black with your polish.
Which casting marks were you admiring? My photo didn't really show them well, there were etched shapes everywhere. Basically looked like big water spots and had to sand them all out. The
little nubs around the edge of it I sanded off in an effort to get a mirror shine,
but in hindsight my methods left a lot of deep scratches that are hidden by the camera angle. Removing the extra post cleaned things up (the other one centers the PCV connector), but it make a large divot in the surface.
Post#19 of this thread
Also notice the variety of wheels used especially the one used around 4:40. By just using the airway wheel, you can achieve max. bling, but will still have shiny scratches. That's the reason I stated to master the polishing before moving on to the sanding.
The wheels I am looking to strip are GM's 8 lug 16" "PYO" wheels. They are a high polish from the factory but have a somewhat machined texture to them. I think they would shine up nicely. They are not painted just cleared. Hub cabs are chromed so they would not look out of place.
Sounds like a plan.
The hard sewn wheels cut harder than the blue Air Way or are they softer and provide a higher luster? I have one spiral sewn wheel.
Not the wheel that I'm refering to. The one you mention is a loose cotton buff.
The hard sewn will allow for pressure and heat to work its magic with the bar.
The one I finished with was a very soft cotton buff that I went across it with at 2000RPM then slowed to 1000rpm. Not sure if it helped, but some areas seemed better at the lower speed.
What do you reccomend for a sealant? Just a regular paint sealant like the Menzerna Power Lock that I have, or is there something more specific to metals that I should be looking for.
Thanks.