LC CCS White pad/black paint before and after use ???

gibson24

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Two weeks ago I did full paint correction on black 2015 GMC 3500. I started with M105 with a Orange CCS pad then moved on to a white CCS pad with 205. Standard procedure...

Yesterday I did a polish only with M205 on a black 2004 Jaguar XJ8. Just after a few panels the surface of the white pad was turning black in a hurry. When I did the GMC that was also black in color the white CCS pad stayed basically clean appearing for the entire project.

I'm wondering why such a difference occurred. I posted pics of both jobs in another thread although I'll post a pic of the white CCS pad after the use on the Jaguar. The pad was actually twice as black as what the picture shows because I had cleaned the pad off with a towel and it's just been in a bucket with cleaner.

Let me know what you think.
 
Two weeks ago I did full paint correction on black 2015 GMC 3500. I started with M105 with a Orange CCS pad then moved on to a white CCS pad with 205. Standard procedure...

Yesterday I did a polish only with M205 on a black 2004 Jaguar XJ8. Just after a few panels the surface of the white pad was turning black in a hurry. When I did the GMC that was also black in color the white CCS pad stayed basically clean appearing for the entire project.

I'm wondering why such a difference occurred. I posted pics of both jobs in another thread although I'll post a pic of the white CCS pad after the use on the Jaguar. The pad was actually twice as black as what the picture shows because I had cleaned the pad off with a towel and it's just been in a bucket with cleaner.

Let me know what you think.

Pic of the car added..
 
Also, at first I did a test spot with M105 and a CCS Orange pad and that also was very unlike the 2015 GMC. After a small test spot the 105 was very difficult to remove with a microfiber. On the GMC I had no issues applying or removing the 105. Almost like removing a dried wax on the Jag. May have no relation just thought that was strange. I'm still learning here...
 
Is it single stage paint? The car could have been repainted in just an area with single stage paint.
 
My first thought was a re paint... I also mentioned to the owner the vehicle may have been repainted but he was unaware of work done to the car. He bought it last year privately but didn't have any history of the car
 
I couldn't visually find of a possible repaint though on the car anywhere. That doesn't mean an expert wouldn't have though.
 
What year is the car? You can get the paint code and contact an auto paint retailer and they can tell you if it's single stage. Looking at that pad I would say it is single stage.
 
2004 Jaguar XJ8 Vanden Plas.

I did wash and clay the vehicle thoroughly prior to starting paint correction. I use Griots clay and Speed Shine. Wash/clay is my standard procedure just to put that out there.

I will get the vin code an do some research for sure. That's a great idea.
 
Just read Mike Phillips write up on single stage vs clear coat. Definitely sounds like a single stage paint issue on the white pads....but on a 2004 Jaguar? Strange
 
Do you have a paint thickness gauge? It is very easy to tell if a panel has been repainted based on the thicker film build on re-sprayed panels.
 
I do not. After this last job I been seriously thinking about getting a gauge. Any recommendations on a quality gauge that won't break the break? I do this as a side job
 
Two weeks ago I did full paint correction on black 2015 GMC 3500. I started with M105 with a Orange CCS pad then moved on to a white CCS pad with 205. Standard procedure...

Yesterday I did a polish only with M205 on a black 2004 Jaguar XJ8. Just after a few panels the surface of the white pad was turning black in a hurry. When I did the GMC that was also black in color the white CCS pad stayed basically clean appearing for the entire project.

I'm wondering why such a difference occurred. I posted pics of both jobs in another thread although I'll post a pic of the white CCS pad after the use on the Jaguar. The pad was actually twice as black as what the picture shows because I had cleaned the pad off with a towel and it's just been in a bucket with cleaner.

Let me know what you think.

Back in 2003 or 2004 when I purchased my 1st PC, I owned a black 2000 Dodge conversion van. Every time I polished the paint, my pads turned black. The first time it happened, I thought what the hell, single stage paint on a 2000 van???? But, the paint was BC/CC and I just blew it off as contamination....
 
Just read Mike Phillips write up on single stage vs clear coat. Definitely sounds like a single stage paint issue on the white pads....but on a 2004 Jaguar? Strange

Toyota is still using single stage white and red paint. At least as of 2012
 
I only did a small test spot using the Orange pad and 105 and decided not to use it
 
If this were a true single stage paint I would think you would be pulling a lot more black off the car and your pads would show a LOT more black paint residue.

Almost kind of looks like a tinted clearcoat, see my picture here, this covers every type of paint we work on in the normal world.


Single Stage Paint - Tinted Clears - Basecoat/Clearcoat - Embedded Dirt


There's also pictures showing what your pads will look like when buffing on any of these three types of paint plus what embedded dirt looks like on you pad.

I have 2 other articles that really show well what pads look like when buffing on paint that has a lot of embedded dirt build up.


Here's why you need to polish paint...


Dirt in Paint or DIP - Stained Paint - Dirt Embedded Paint


How to remove stains and embedded dirt out of paint


This is what embedded dirt looks like....

Autoscrub012.jpg





:)
 
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