C. Charles Hahn
New member
- Aug 27, 2007
- 3,103
- 0
I never liked dry sanding with a rotary either.
I don't even call that sanding... I call it grinding. :buffing:
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I never liked dry sanding with a rotary either.
Thanks Mr. Fusion.........I think I might try buying the Griot polisher and using their method to see if I have better results.
Also they do sell 3" backing plates for full size polishers you know...like the PC or full size Griots....up to you.
Wills.......Griots says they do not sell a 3" adapter for their 6" machine. Do you know where to get a 3" and if it fits the Griots machine?
Should opti-coat be able to fill in sand scratches(1500) like a clear coat or urethane mix?
Perfect answer. Thank you.I just got mine this week:hungry:... it does not fill in/hide scratches like the urethane. I did have one small test sample that showed some promise, but most of what I have done so far with it shows very little "coverage" of imperfections... definitely not enough to hide 1500. Maybe 3000, but for now I'm expecting it will need a compound/polish prior to OC.
I agree. Its why i keep telling the people here that 800 and 600 do the job perfectly. Its not about taking the whole thing off and applying a new one. Its about bring back to life whats ALREADY THERE. And i agree with you too on doing a pair in 20 to 40 mins. I just cant understand why people spends hours doing a pair. If you start at 800 and you sand it and you see the yellow haze gone, thats it, move to the next grit. Trizacts are $90 something for a box of 15 6"... Its an arm and a leg if you ask me. Thats why for 3000g i use meguiars finishing paper. Yes i do it by hand but $26 for 25 sheets its alot cheaper and effective in my book.
Im not sure the severity of headlights that you have done or the area that you are in, but in many cases around here(socal) i get headlights with clear that has failed at the top of the light but the bottom half is good clear. Due to the fact that failed coating comes off super easily, sure i can see 600-800 or even 1000 working just fine. but thats only going to be effective on half of the headlight. Now the headlight is exposed on the upper half and has good coating on the lower half. are you saying that after removing the failed clear, its now possible to just hit the entire light(uncoated and coated)with finishing grit and clear over?
There is a visible difference where there is no clear and clear. I would imagine that would be noticable once the spar mix is added. Am i wrong?
Mitsuman95.....I agree....I posted earlier about that. I am here in Florida and get quite a few lights that just the top part is screwed up and have tried using 800, 600 and 400 to remove the "good" clear and all it did was dull my discs like it was titanium. I end up using 60 grit(because thats all I have on hand) by hand or a rough sanding block just to remove the "good" clear. I also tried blending the bad into the good and it left a visable line that was noticable to me. I definately admit that I am NOT a bodyman or pro at doing the headlights though. It's good to know that I am not the only one having a difficult time with those lights. I am going to get like a 220 disc or something...or else just have to go through 10 discs of 400 for one set of lights. Those kind are tough. Give me some 2000 Chevy Cavaliers or Chryslers that the coating is completely gone on, all day long.......ha
Im the MAN
So as far as i can tell, if this mix is sealed tight, it can be stored. For how long? Not sure. But this mix still looked good and went on just as good as day 1, after a month.rops:
Also a question for you drill guys, are you guys following it up with a "finishing" foam pad? or going to a high grit with a regular sanding disc?
I was experimenting tonight with stopping at 2000 using a regular wet/dry sanding disc and it looked good, but i could still see swirls(up close with lights on at night) after 105 and 205 was applied. Although god dam it was a hell of a lot faster....
I have been using a drill but have a small 3" Griot's machine coming in the mail. I've tried both ways. Mostly I used just wet sanding with 400, 800, 1500 and then a 3M Trizact 3000 foam pad. I have tried going to 1500 and then compounding and spar. 93Fox said though, that the compounding doesn't give the spar a good rough surface to "bite into". That makes sense to me, so I think I am gonna go back to just pads to 3000 and no compound.Just as an update on my pre-mixed 50/50 spar/spirits. I just finished up the bottle with amazing results. After a month its still coating the headlight as it did the first coating. I had some issues with specs of crap getting on the headlight but apparently I wasn't getting enough product on the shop towel.
So as far as i can tell, if this mix is sealed tight, it can be stored. For how long? Not sure. But this mix still looked good and went on just as good as day 1, after a month.rops:
Also a question for you drill guys, are you guys following it up with a "finishing" foam pad? or going to a high grit with a regular sanding disc?
I was experimenting tonight with stopping at 2000 using a regular wet/dry sanding disc and it looked good, but i could still see swirls(up close with lights on at night) after 105 and 205 was applied. Although god dam it was a hell of a lot faster....
I have been using a drill but have a small 3" Griot's machine coming in the mail. I've tried both ways. Mostly I used just wet sanding with 400, 800, 1500 and then a 3M Trizact 3000 foam pad. I have tried going to 1500 and then compounding and spar. 93Fox said though, that the compounding doesn't give the spar a good rough surface to "bite into". That makes sense to me, so I think I am gonna go back to just pads to 3000 and no compound.