MNRyan
New member
- Jul 6, 2017
- 3
- 0
Difficulty Polishing Single Stage Paint
Hi guys, first time poster but long time reader here. Fantastic website and store, I've learned so much on here - Thank you!
I deal mostly with single stage enamels on farm equipment. I recently have been working on a combine with some very oxidized paint. Parts of the paint job have been repainted.
My process after thoroughly cleaning is Megs 105 with the griots fast cutting microfiber pad on my griots DA.
I then go to megs 205 with griots microfiber fast fishing pad.
To follow it all up I add a layer of wax with a griots red waxing pad.
This system has worked well for me in the past and has been versatile on both dual stage and single stage paints I've done. With this project I have had a really bad time with my compound drying out and becoming unworkable. It seems like after only a pass or two the product will glaze and become difficult to work with.
The worst part is getting it off again, both 105 and 205 become like a layer of concrete on the paint. I realize 105 is known for being difficult to work with, but on other projects I haven't had that big of an issue. This project is a different story however. I tried skipping 105 because I know its downfall is drying out but the 205 will do the same thing on my first cutting pass.
I guess my questions are; is this normal?
What could I do differently?
Is the heavy oxidation causing this?
Is it something with my technique?
What are the next steps I should take?
Like I said I've had great results in the past but with this project I spend most of my time trying to get old dried compound off which is extremely time consuming. I should mention that I work in generally small zones and the paint was out of the sun and cool to the touch when I was working on it.
Any suggestions guys?
Thanks a lot!!
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Hi guys, first time poster but long time reader here. Fantastic website and store, I've learned so much on here - Thank you!
I deal mostly with single stage enamels on farm equipment. I recently have been working on a combine with some very oxidized paint. Parts of the paint job have been repainted.
My process after thoroughly cleaning is Megs 105 with the griots fast cutting microfiber pad on my griots DA.
I then go to megs 205 with griots microfiber fast fishing pad.
To follow it all up I add a layer of wax with a griots red waxing pad.
This system has worked well for me in the past and has been versatile on both dual stage and single stage paints I've done. With this project I have had a really bad time with my compound drying out and becoming unworkable. It seems like after only a pass or two the product will glaze and become difficult to work with.
The worst part is getting it off again, both 105 and 205 become like a layer of concrete on the paint. I realize 105 is known for being difficult to work with, but on other projects I haven't had that big of an issue. This project is a different story however. I tried skipping 105 because I know its downfall is drying out but the 205 will do the same thing on my first cutting pass.
I guess my questions are; is this normal?
What could I do differently?
Is the heavy oxidation causing this?
Is it something with my technique?
What are the next steps I should take?
Like I said I've had great results in the past but with this project I spend most of my time trying to get old dried compound off which is extremely time consuming. I should mention that I work in generally small zones and the paint was out of the sun and cool to the touch when I was working on it.
Any suggestions guys?
Thanks a lot!!
View attachment 58640
View attachment 58641
View attachment 58642
View attachment 58643
