Do you finish?

DKenn08

New member
Joined
Mar 10, 2013
Messages
11
Reaction score
0
When compounding/polishing do you finish per panel or the entire car? For example, you complete the steps needed for the hood and then move on to the front quarter panel and repeat OR compound the hood move to the next panel and compound that so on and so on?
 
You mean compound, polish and then seal each panel as you go? I do the whole car then go back for each step. Never thought of doin each panel all the way.
 
^ As ihaveacamaro states, unless you're not able to complete it all in one day.
 
After test spot, compound everywhere, then polish everywhere

I agree. I work with 1 product at a time, 1 panel at a time. Hence my signature "I live my life a quarter panel at a time"

I Always finish with M205 or Ultimate Polish ;)
 
I had this exact question before. After experiencing the actual correction stage, I now finish each panel with one product at a time as stated previously. Happy detailing! And be sure to post your work for us to see.
 
Yup, it's do the entire thing, single stage at a time. You *could* break it up but it'd take a LOT LONGER. When you're working with a product, you want to keep using pads as you go. Swapping old dirty ones for new fresh ones and tossing them in cleaner as you move to a new one.

If you tried to compound, polish, seal, wax, etc. you would have TONS of different pads going on at once. It takes a lot of pads to compound a car, a few less to polish, then only 1 (or 2 at most) to apply sealant. All of them though are different colors. Can't imagine trying to lay one down, move to polishing, go back to the compound pad only to find it's totally dried out. Nope, one stage at a time saves you a lot of headache. ;)
 
Yup, it's do the entire thing, single stage at a time. You *could* break it up but it'd take a LOT LONGER. When you're working with a product, you want to keep using pads as you go. Swapping old dirty ones for new fresh ones and tossing them in cleaner as you move to a new one.

If you tried to compound, polish, seal, wax, etc. you would have TONS of different pads going on at once. It takes a lot of pads to compound a car, a few less to polish, then only 1 (or 2 at most) to apply sealant. All of them though are different colors. Can't imagine trying to lay one down, move to polishing, go back to the compound pad only to find it's totally dried out. Nope, one stage at a time saves you a lot of headache. ;)

100% agree
 
After test spot, compound everywhere, then polish everywhere
^This is the most efficient way to do it. Why stop your momentum after each panel to switch pads and products? Doesn't make much sense.

I agree. I work with 1 product at a time, 1 panel at a time. Hence my signature "I live my life a quarter panel at a time"

I Always finish with M205 or Ultimate Polish ;)
^Hopefully you mean I finish down with M205 or UP after a test spot indicates it is the right product :xyxthumbs:

Always is a word that should be avoided in detailing... IMO. Related to this comment, I tried finishing down a black Porsche with M205 and it looked like it had just been compounded... SF4500 was the way to go. Just goes to show that it is always best to be well prepared by having several different products in your arsenal!
 
im new at this and was pressed for time and on top of that my pad were limited... what i did was in this order orange pad/panel white pad/panel the reason i did it was to give the pads sometime to rest?
i read that the pads heat up and i only have 1pad of each color
and i wasnt going to be able finishing in 1 day
 
im new at this and was pressed for time and on top of that my pad were limited... what i did was in this order orange pad/panel white pad/panel the reason i did it was to give the pads sometime to rest?
i read that the pads heat up and i only have 1pad of each color
and i wasnt going to be able finishing in 1 day

Sure, pads do heat up. Foam pads can withstand the heat. The short amount of time that you take in between sections (you can usually assume there are multiple sections within a panel) is enough time for the pad and backing plate to cool down enough to continue working.

I highly recommend investing in more pads though. Even if you are cleaning your pad often (as you should be!!!!!!!!!!!), you should still switch your pad out at least a couple times throughout the compounding or polishing process. Working clean is a great way to help you get the best results!
 
I proceed one product at a time on the entire car, from first product to last. Plus, if you are using a sealant that needs some time to cure and plan to top it with a wax, I can't imagine doing it any other way.
 
Not to high jack this thread...but that is one reason why I really am not a huge fan of Rinseless washes....NOT because they are not great products, but because I hate the process...ONE panel at a time (wash, wipe, dry), then start over on the next...that drives me absolutely crazy!


I like to wash and polish my cars the same way...the whole thing, then the whole thing again, etc...
 
I understand where all you are coming from, and ideally that's the way to do it, but what happens when we're talking about daily drivers, or cars that sit outside all day that the weekend warrior is doing? I can't finish a car in one day, I just can't. I don't have garage space to let a car sit while I'm not working on it, and the family cars that I compound/polish/seal can never sit long enough to do the whole thing without having to be driven somewhere. If any of you guys have this same situation, do you still go step by step? By that I mean compound until you can't anymore, then whenever you're able to continue progress on the car just pick back up the compounding where you left off? I've always had the mind set that I'd like to completely finish a panel and know it done and protected at one time, as opposed to just going step by step and having to rewash the car before you're able to continue again and possibly inflicting more scratches. Like I said, ideally the way to go is compound the whole car, then polish the whole car etc...that's the fastest and easiest, but I can understand the panel by panel method. Yes it's a pita, but like everything else, has its place I guess.
 
I understand where all you are coming from, and ideally that's the way to do it, but what happens when we're talking about daily drivers, or cars that sit outside all day that the weekend warrior is doing? I can't finish a car in one day, I just can't. I don't have garage space to let a car sit while I'm not working on it, and the family cars that I compound/polish/seal can never sit long enough to do the whole thing without having to be driven somewhere. If any of you guys have this same situation, do you still go step by step? By that I mean compound until you can't anymore, then whenever you're able to continue progress on the car just pick back up the compounding where you left off? I've always had the mind set that I'd like to completely finish a panel and know it done and protected at one time, as opposed to just going step by step and having to rewash the car before you're able to continue again and possibly inflicting more scratches. Like I said, ideally the way to go is compound the whole car, then polish the whole car etc...that's the fastest and easiest, but I can understand the panel by panel method. Yes it's a pita, but like everything else, has its place I guess.


same boat as well my car is outdoor 24/7 daily driver
have to do compounding and polishing on the driveway
 
Back
Top