The Engineer
New member
- Jan 25, 2007
- 9
- 0
Well I just got my 7424 and gear this week so I was anxious to try it out. To be honest, my first detail using this machine and products didn't turn out as spectacular as I thought, so I thought I'd post my process here to see if I did anything wrong.
I started by washing the car down with Liquid Dawn soap to strip off any previous waxes as much as possible. Dried off the car with a MF towel. All was good.
The next step was to apply Optimum Compound on all the flat surfaces of my car, like the hood, trunklid, and sides of the car that face the sun. They all had what appeared to be contamination in the paint, like fine water spots. I used the OC with a 6.5" Lake Country Orange cutting pad. I spread the OC on the buffer and dabbed it on the paint where I was working. I started the PC on speed 3- for a couple minutes, working the OC into the paint. Then as it was breaking down (or so I thought) I flipped up to speed 5-6 and finished using up product.
I followed this step up with Optimum Polish, using a LC White buffing pad. Same idea, used speed 3-4 to work it in until it started breaking down, then flipped up to 5-6 to finish it off.
The water spots in the paint did not come out, they didn't even look like they were phased by these products/steps. However the fine scratches in the paint finished off nicely, but my paint still looks dull and contaminated from the fine water spots.
Did I do things correctly? Am I to assume I need a stronger cutting pad like a yellow pad or even a wool pad? Perhaps I need to consider wetsanding the really bad areas?
Tell me your thoughts. I will try to post some pics of what I'm talking about soon.
I started by washing the car down with Liquid Dawn soap to strip off any previous waxes as much as possible. Dried off the car with a MF towel. All was good.
The next step was to apply Optimum Compound on all the flat surfaces of my car, like the hood, trunklid, and sides of the car that face the sun. They all had what appeared to be contamination in the paint, like fine water spots. I used the OC with a 6.5" Lake Country Orange cutting pad. I spread the OC on the buffer and dabbed it on the paint where I was working. I started the PC on speed 3- for a couple minutes, working the OC into the paint. Then as it was breaking down (or so I thought) I flipped up to speed 5-6 and finished using up product.
I followed this step up with Optimum Polish, using a LC White buffing pad. Same idea, used speed 3-4 to work it in until it started breaking down, then flipped up to 5-6 to finish it off.
The water spots in the paint did not come out, they didn't even look like they were phased by these products/steps. However the fine scratches in the paint finished off nicely, but my paint still looks dull and contaminated from the fine water spots.
Did I do things correctly? Am I to assume I need a stronger cutting pad like a yellow pad or even a wool pad? Perhaps I need to consider wetsanding the really bad areas?
Tell me your thoughts. I will try to post some pics of what I'm talking about soon.
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