Here's a tip...
When polishing glass, I practice and teach,
The Buddy System
The Buddy System is simply have a buddy with you, this can be a girlfriend, wife, son, daughter of a "buddy", and as you're doing the polishing have them be standing nearby and ready to mist on some water.
Glass polishes, at least all the glass polishes I've used are water based and as you're buffing, the heat generated plus normal water evaporation, tends to make the polish dry up fairly quickly.
If you don't have a buddy to mist water onto the glass as you're buffing you have to do one of two things,
1. Stop buffing, mist on some water, start buffing again. This can include turning the buffer of and on as you do this which is awkward and wastes a lot of TIME. The process already takes a lot of time you don't need it to take any longer.
2. Try to mist some water on while holding the buffer against the glass, (usually with it running, can't lift it off you you'll sling splatter everywhere), then after misting water somehow set the water bottle down and go back to buffing but only for about a minute because then you'll need more water misted onto the glass.
Just speaking from experience, when machine polishing glass to remove scratches out of the glass the best method I've found and use and teach is....
The Buddy System
You can read about it here in post #6
Glass polishing - How to remove scratches in glass
Here's the
Buddy System in action...
Also, it helps to have a spray bottle of clean water that has a spray that really does a good job of
ATOMIZING the water so instead of
SQUIRTING water onto the glass which will make a huge mess when you run the glass polishing pad into it instead you spray a
FINE MIST of water onto the glass which
DRAMATICALLY reduces splatter.
And in case you don't know... glass polishing is really messy.
In my classes I teach doing this BEFORE you wash the car so after you're done polishing the glass you can simply wash the car and thus wash all the splatter off the car.
Otherwise I highly recommend you do a thorough job of covering up the car like I show in this article,
How to remove tiny pinhole pits in glass windows using a rotary buffer
And not to knock Facebook but try to find this type of information shared in an easy to read format with pictures that flow and match the text plus formatted text and you simply cannot find it.
