Lake Country 5.5" Foam Flat Pads - Colors and Descriptions + Links

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Lake Country 5.5" Foam Flat Pads - Colors and Descriptions + Links


Took a screenshot of the AG store page showing all the newest colors for the famous 5.5" Lake Country Flat pads, sorry to say in order to capture all of the pads in a single screen grab I had to reduce the resolution of the screen from 100% to 60% and as such you cannot easily read the text so I'll put it down below. Can't put it next to each pad without doing a bunch of time-intensive work.


Lake_Country_Flat_Pads.jpg





Here's pad colors and descriptions. The blue pad titles are >clickable< to the AG store for more info or to purchase.


Yellow Cutting Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
Use this pad to apply compounds or polishes to remove severe oxidation, swirls, and scratches. It is the most aggressive and should only be used on oxidized and heavily swirled finishes. Always follow this pad with a white or gray pad and a fine polish to refine the paint until it is smooth.


Orange Light Cutting Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
Firm, high density foam for scratch and defect removal. Use this pad with polishes and swirl removers. It’s an all around pad that will work on most light to moderate imperfections.



White Heavy Polishing Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
Less dense foam formula for the application of cleaner waxes, one step polishes, or "all in one" type products. This pad has very light cutting power, so it's perfect for pre-wax cleaners.


Green Polishing/AIO Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
Use this foam to apply one-step cleaner waxes. It is a balance of polishing and finishing that is perfect for all-in-one product application.



Blue Light Polishing Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
This pad is not as dense as the green polishing pad and provides little cutting ability. Generally used to polish to perfect, this pad will leave a high shine on the surface. Perfect for use with a finishing glaze, last-step polish, and some all-in-one cleaner polishes.



Black Finishing Flat 5.5 inch Foam Pad
Composition is firm enough to withstand added pressure during final finishing to remove buffer swirls. It has no cut and will apply thin, even coats of waxes, sealants, and glazes.



The black pad is now a finishing pad or a waxing pad.


:)
 
Interesting change to the colors.

Have the white and orange changed much physically? The descriptions seem a little confusing for the white and orange. A one-step polish for me could very easily be a swirl remover depending on the pad, polish, and hardness of the paint. Example: a swirl remover/light compound paired with a white pad on hard VW paint was a perfect one-step for me. When using a one-step product, I'm correcting defects, not applying the abrassive product.

While I appreciate what they are trying to do, I can't help but wonder if they are making it more confusing. I like to keep it simple with descriptions of the cut like: wax/sealant application, light polishing, polishing, cutting, and heavy cutting. That would leave the type of product up to the user to test what they need based on a test spot.
 
Interesting change to the colors.

Have the white and orange changed much physically? The descriptions seem a little confusing for the white and orange. A one-step polish for me could very easily be a swirl remover depending on the pad, polish, and hardness of the paint. Example: a swirl remover/light compound paired with a white pad on hard VW paint was a perfect one-step for me. When using a one-step product, I'm correcting defects, not applying the abrassive product.

While I appreciate what they are trying to do, I can't help but wonder if they are making it more confusing. I like to keep it simple with descriptions of the cut like: wax/sealant application, light polishing, polishing, cutting, and heavy cutting. That would leave the type of product up to the user to test what they need based on a test spot.

I have to agree with you. This is why I choose to use the Hex logic pads. Those descriptions are exactly whats on each pad's package. Is there an industry standard for pad color though? I think this order of colors is the same as the hex logic ones. If not, damn it there should be.
 
Interesting change to the colors.

Have the white and orange changed much physically? The descriptions seem a little confusing for the white and orange. A one-step polish for me could very easily be a swirl remover depending on the pad, polish, and hardness of the paint. Example: a swirl remover/light compound paired with a white pad on hard VW paint was a perfect one-step for me. When using a one-step product, I'm correcting defects, not applying the abrassive product.

While I appreciate what they are trying to do, I can't help but wonder if they are making it more confusing. I like to keep it simple with descriptions of the cut like: wax/sealant application, light polishing, polishing, cutting, and heavy cutting. That would leave the type of product up to the user to test what they need based on a test spot.


I'll send the link to this thread to Jason Brennan, I'm sure he can clear up any confusion.



Is there an industry standard for pad color though?


Nope. There is no industry wide standard color coding. In my how-to book I wrote that each of us must do our own research for each brand of pad we're interested in and go by what the manufacturer says.

Or - ask on a forum like this...


:)
 
Nope. There is no industry wide standard color coding. In my how-to book I wrote that each of us must do our own research for each brand of pad we're interested in and go by what the manufacturer says.

Or - ask on a forum like this...


:)

AND keep notes as to what they are. Handy notes. That way when you go through your Pile of Pads (PoP), you know what does what!! Especially handy when you have similar colors from different companies!!! (as in, blue is cut for one company, but finishing for another (just a make believe example)).
 
This is why I mainly try to stick with Rupes pads. I know the colors and what they do. When I buy other manufacturers pads I have to feel them and guess their purpose. I really don’t see why pad manufacturers don’t get together and set a color standard. If they have a pad that the other do not have they could just make it a shade lighter or darker than the next textured pad. I hate grabbing a burgundy pad and having to think about how much cut it has. Call me I have some ideas on world peace too.
 
For the beginner, I suggest taking a pad when you get it and write on the back with a Sharpie what type of pad it is. It will help you the next time you go to use it.
 
For the beginner, I suggest taking a pad when you get it and write on the back with a Sharpie what type of pad it is. It will help you the next time you go to use it.

I have some that faded over time. Oh well
 
For the beginner, I suggest taking a pad when you get it and write on the back with a Sharpie what type of pad it is. It will help you the next time you go to use it.

Curious, what Sharpie works on the back since most I have are black hook-n-loop?

Like the idea!
 
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