We used a compound I don't recall the name of and a wool pad on a buffer as well as by hand with a microfiber. The buffer and wool pad were on another area and the cloth was on this particular spot.
The compound had a similar texture to my Meguier's Ultimate but I think it was by 3M.
I didn't...
Background info:
My father repainted an old car with Delfleet Evolution Single Stage Polyurethane Enamel. He told me he has 3 layers down.
Unfortunately he has overspray in some spots.
How do we remove overspray? We tried traditional polishing methods but they seemed to make it worse:
See I do have a "Ladderkart" (it is exactly what the name says) that I use for all kinds of things. It's pretty awkward though. Probably because I have to work in a sloped stone driveway. It fits and stays in my trunk.
I'm looking for a better method.
So basically we short folks are all in...
I do that with my Contour but I don't have the wingspan to get to the center of something bulgy like the Taurus. I also can't use the buffer one handed. Well, I can, but the lack of control makes it dangerous to both me and the car.
Can you recommend a platform? It would have to be non-level...
Per the title. I'm a mere 5'1. I'm not even tall enough to be the needle on a sun dial. I can barely get my small sedan roof (1999 Contour, my avatar) with a ladder. How would you recommend I do larger vehicles? Trucks I figure I can stand on the bed and SUVs I can crawl up there and work my way...
Thanks.
I thought it would have been obvious due to my mention of dew, but this was fresh poo on a cool morning (55°F or thereabouts). It literally slid off the way a towel glides over wax. No scrubbing.
I wouldn't have taken a paper towel to hardened poo on a dry 100°F day at high noon.