Flex 3401

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Hi Folks, I wonder if you could help me, i purchased a flex 3401 for my son's B day along with the Meguiars soft buff polishing kit. i am totally green on the subject, my son tells me that he needs to remove all chemicals from ie Tar etc before he starts polishing, would you happen to know what kind of product he may use to remove this certain chemical? he own a Honday Civi SI 2010, his back bumber has a fairly visible scuff on the corner, would you what kind of Pads that would be require to remover that, and what else could he use? you suggestions are tatally appreciated. thanks

Gerry
 
During the wash phase he could spray any trouble spots (tar, bugs, etc...) with either some type of bug & tar remover or an all purpose cleaner diluted down.

After he's done cleaning the car in this fashion he should get a claybar to remove the imbedded contaminants.

After THAT you can start the polishing with the FLEX because now you're working on a clean surface and trying to correct the imperfections. Honda clearcoats tend to be fairly soft and the FLEX is quite powerful, so I would start with a very light abrasive polish on Meguiar's Polishing pad (I believe it's their burgandy pad?) on speed 5 of the FLEX and inspect your work as you go before moving onto the next area.

It's very important to work a test area to see how you need to change (more aggressive polish, more aggressive pad, more pressure on the machine, faster speed on the machine, etc...)

Practice truly makes perfect when machine polishing. Tell him not to get discouraged if it doesn't work out perfectly the first time around.

BTW, that's an awesome present :)
 
Hey Sailor , you can use a clay with a lubrication or Meguiars body solvent to remove chemicals and tar.
 
Hey Sailor , you can use a clay with a lubrication or Meguiars body solvent to remove chemicals and tar.

Have you tested to make sure the Body Solvent won't dissolve the clay?

I haven't so I don't know... just asking because when I read your recommendation the first thing I thought of was there might be some kind of chemical compatibility issues...

I have some and can go test but I'd like to see what you've experienced...


Regardless, just for all the lurkers that might read this into the future, normally you would use detailing clay with a dedicated clay lubricant, not a solvent type product.



:)
 
Hi Gerry,

It looks like this was your first thread and first posts to our forum... so...

Welcome to Autogeek Online :welcome:


my son tells me that he needs to remove all chemicals from ie Tar etc before he starts polishing,


Does your son read our forum? The Flex 3401 is a great tool but it needs to be held flat at all times under power or it will try to walk away from your or towards you depending upon the angle of tilt applied to the face of the pad.

This isn't an issue as it teaches you to hold the pad flat... I think I discuss this in this thread,

1957 Chevrolet Belair Extreme Makeover - Flex 3401 & Wolfgang Smackdown!



Also here's a few short videos on using this tool....



Part 1 - How To Pick the Right Car Polisher for your Detail Project
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtrdTvnZX3I]YouTube - Part 1 - How To Pick the Right Car Polisher for your Detail Project[/video]


Part 2 - How To Pick the Right Car Polisher for your Detail Project
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2k92m5cJxCk]YouTube - Part 2 - How To Pick the Right Car Polisher for your Detail Project[/video]


The Flex 3401 in action...
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CtUaI_8HhE]YouTube - Performing a "Test Spot" to the paint on a 1957 Chevrolet Belair[/video]



When buffing out a car with a Flex 3401 you're going to slice up the car into smaller sections, for example you would probably slice the hood up into 4 sections, you wouldn't try to buff out the entire hood at one time...

For this reason you want to do "Section Passes" when buffing out an entire car, this video on using a DA polisher shows and talks about this...


How to do a Section Pass
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q70g83mnTn4]YouTube - How to do a "Section Pass" with a Porter Cable 7424XP[/video]



Note that the correction step is the most important as it's during the correction step that the defects are removed, if the are not removed during the correction step then they'll still be in the paint after you wipe the last coat of wax off the car it's just they'll be shiny....






:)
 
During the wash phase he could spray any trouble spots (tar, bugs, etc...) with either some type of bug & tar remover or an all purpose cleaner diluted down.

After he's done cleaning the car in this fashion he should get a claybar to remove the imbedded contaminants.

After THAT you can start the polishing with the FLEX because now you're working on a clean surface and trying to correct the imperfections. Honda clearcoats tend to be fairly soft and the FLEX is quite powerful, so I would start with a very light abrasive polish on Meguiar's Polishing pad (I believe it's their burgandy pad?) on speed 5 of the FLEX and inspect your work as you go before moving onto the next area.

It's very important to work a test area to see how you need to change (more aggressive polish, more aggressive pad, more pressure on the machine, faster speed on the machine, etc...)

Practice truly makes perfect when machine polishing. Tell him not to get discouraged if it doesn't work out perfectly the first time around.

BTW, that's an awesome present :)

sorry, what is a claybar? i told you i was green :) and where can i get that stuff? do i have to go to a special store? or just a regular store, how about part for source? we have a store here call Canadian Tire, or could i order this on Autogeek?
 
I read that as 2 different options 1. clay with a lubricant, or 2. Meguiars body solvent.
 
A clay bar, also called detailing clay is a synthetic clay, thinks of a hi tech Play-Doh that contains a special type of abrasive that when rubbed over the paint will remove above surface bonded contaminants and restore a smooth as silk surface.

Here's more information...

The Baggie Test - How to inspect for above surface bonded contaminants

PaintCleaningByHand022.jpg




Tips and Tricks for using detailing clay

How often do I need to clay my car?

Wolfgang Elastic Poly Clay Bar - Review and How-to

Do I need to wash my car after I use detailing clay to clay the paint?


How to use detailing clay to remove "Above Surface Bonded Contaminants" and restore a smooth as silk surface.


Part 1 - How To Use Detailing Clay
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfxAesk4Po4]YouTube - Part 1 - How to use detailing clay[/video]

Part 2 - How To Use Detailing Clay
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opfK408uIxM]YouTube - Part 2 - How to use detailing clay[/video]




:)
 
I just rubbed some Meguiar's Body Solvent onto the first two clay bars I found in our Studio, one is the 3M Perfect-it III Cleaner Clay, (the blue clay), an the other is the Pinnacle Ultra Poly Clay, (light green in color), after a few seconds of rubbing the clay with the solvent the both clays were dissolving...

Don't use solvents with detailing clay, stick with clay lubricants.


:)
 
Hey Sailor , you can use a clay with a lubrication or Meguiars body solvent to remove chemicals and tar.

I read that as 2 different options 1. clay with a lubricant, or 2. Meguiars body solvent.


Now I see what you mean Dave... he meant either or, as in use clay with a lubricant, or use Solvent to remove the tar... He didn't mean to use the solvent with the clay...

When I first read it, I read it to mean a person could use a lubricant OR the Body Solvent with the clay...


:props:
 
During the wash phase he could spray any trouble spots (tar, bugs, etc...) with either some type of bug & tar remover or an all purpose cleaner diluted down.

After he's done cleaning the car in this fashion he should get a claybar to remove the imbedded contaminants.

After THAT you can start the polishing with the FLEX because now you're working on a clean surface and trying to correct the imperfections. Honda clearcoats tend to be fairly soft and the FLEX is quite powerful, so I would start with a very light abrasive polish on Meguiar's Polishing pad (I believe it's their burgandy pad?) on speed 5 of the FLEX and inspect your work as you go before moving onto the next area.

It's very important to work a test area to see how you need to change (more aggressive polish, more aggressive pad, more pressure on the machine, faster speed on the machine, etc...)

Practice truly makes perfect when machine polishing. Tell him not to get discouraged if it doesn't work out perfectly the first time around.

BTW, that's an awesome present :)

That's how I read it...


:D

Thanks, i have ordered both of them, the clay and the solvent. because i don't believe the clay removes the tar.
 
I personally wouldn't want to use my claybar to remove tar. I would much rather use meguiar's solvent or a bug & tar remover and then clean it off with a wash mit or even a bug-scrub sponge.

The video's that Mike posted are absolutely invaluable. When you have the time, they are certainly worth watching as you will learn a LOT. Reading and seeing are totally different :)
 
If you want to remove road tar right away put some kerosene on a disposable cloth and rub genteelly until it's dissolved..
 
I personally wouldn't want to use my claybar to remove tar. I would much rather use meguiar's solvent or a bug & tar remover and then clean it off with a wash mit or even a bug-scrub sponge.

I agree... clay can work but there are other ways to remove tar without contaminating a good clay bar...

Goof-off and Goo Gone work too... Heck, WD40 works, probably Mineral Oil would work, road tar is pretty easy to dissolve if you have something similar to it... the old like dissolves like...


:)
 
I read that as 2 different options 1. clay with a lubricant, or 2. Meguiars body solvent.

Thats what i mean. It's indeed clay with a lube or ONLY Meguiars body solvent not in combination with the clay. I can't imagine what would happen if you use the clay with the body solvent. Sorry for the early foggy answer.:xyxthumbs:
 
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