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Please enlighten me as to where your professional information was gathered from.
If you don't know what light defects are from a severely neglected finish, maybe you should find another post to help you with those definitions and then come back here.
When you find those out come back and I'll gladly explain why I generalized those speeds.
I think it came out ok, even at speed 6.
The speed setting on the machine doesn't really matter IMHO. It's how fast the pad is spinning on the paint. Various factors can affect this including your machine, polish, pads, saturation of pads, and downward force on the machine. The pad should spin at ample speed to accomplish what you want to do. It takes a while behind a polisher to get a feel for what that is - but it's not rocket science. Even your extension cord or power supply may effect your actual pad speed.
Some say 4 is great, some go slower.
I think Mike Phillips uses speed 4 with a PC to spread wax.
I was wondering why you personally use the speed set at 4 on your machine?
Just to be clear, that was rolop6 that originally brought up speed 4. I was asking because I really wanted to know.![]()
Speed 6 for correcting on silver. Polish, speed 5 and maybe even speed 6. You're going to have a hard time seeing marring on silver, so go with the highest speed that gives good results.
Do you always get faster results with acceptable quality compounding at speed 6?
I have seen comments that a lower speed can actually correct a car more quickly. The main thing that I remember was that at high speed, some compounds like M105 dry out too early and don't allow for enough passes or cause balling of the compound, leading to marring.