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IMO 105 is the hardest compound to work with, short working time, dusting a lot, and leaves cemented dots on the paint
One would have to wonder what you are doing wrong to come up with that statement.
M105 is the best there is for what it was designed for. You just need to know how to use it. Try the KBM and you'll never have the need to try anything else.
Question - why do you want a long working time with a compound. Compounds are meant to remove swirls etc quickly. I don't get it - why would you want to take more passes to remove a swirl or a scratch as against less passes? Defeats the purpose of a compound.
Dusting.. What do you expect with a compound? So now we have all these so called compounds that don't dust as much as M105 - problem is they don't cut either. Examples that come to mind, Optimum Compound and D300. I don't understand the big deal about dusting and compounding. If you are removing heavy swirling etc, then you are going to be washing the vehicle multiple times before you get to jewelling the paint, the dust goes with the washing so who cares about some dust during the compounding stage.
Then again if you use M105 correctly (see my other posts and other's posts) the dusting doesn't really happen if you use M105 correctly.
Cement spots.. - can't say I've ever seen them and I've used gallons of the stuff on all sorts of paints. I hope you realize that M105 is water soluble, therefore all you ever need when wiping the residue is a wet/damp mf. Wash away the residue, don't dry wipe it away. Search my other posts for a more detailed explanation - they explain the M105 (KBM) technique.
One would have to wonder what you are doing wrong to come up with that statement.
M105 is the best there is for what it was designed for. You just need to know how to use it. Try the KBM and you'll never have the need to try anything else.
Question - why do you want a long working time with a compound. Compounds are meant to remove swirls etc quickly. I don't get it - why would you want to take more passes to remove a swirl or a scratch as against less passes? Defeats the purpose of a compound.
Dusting.. What do you expect with a compound? So now we have all these so called compounds that don't dust as much as M105 - problem is they don't cut either. Examples that come to mind, Optimum Compound and D300. I don't understand the big deal about dusting and compounding. If you are removing heavy swirling etc, then you are going to be washing the vehicle multiple times before you get to jewelling the paint, the dust goes with the washing so who cares about some dust during the compounding stage.
Then again if you use M105 correctly (see my other posts and other's posts) the dusting doesn't really happen if you use M105 correctly.
Cement spots.. - can't say I've ever seen them and I've used gallons of the stuff on all sorts of paints. I hope you realize that M105 is water soluble, therefore all you ever need when wiping the residue is a wet/damp mf. Wash away the residue, don't dry wipe it away. Search my other posts for a more detailed explanation - they explain the M105 (KBM) technique.
Along with some tips from the hack and TuscaroraDave I was able to use M105 to do this...I heard some hack that nobody knows posted a video on here with some tips on how to use it with better results...if only I could find it...