Lemee ask ya' this... do you have grit guards in both your buckets? I actually have TWO in each bucket, turned 45°, and connected with wire ties. Completely stops sloshing around, and keeps the soap solution so clean that you can use it twice.

After two uses, just dump it in the wheel bucket (which has a single grit guard).
Wheel cleaning is a big deal. I'd suggest the large and small Daytona brushes, as well as the large and medium Wheel Woolies, and a 1" boars hair wheel brush, (the one with the plastic handle). Then get the 3 pack of Mothers brushes, and get a good Carrand tire scrubbing brush. That'll get you everything you'll need to do any wheel you''ll run across, as well as exhaust tips, wheel wells, lower valance panels, etc.
Oh... make sure and get a couple of the Carrand tire gel applicator brushes. WOW are they a better, easier, more effective way to apply tire gel than with a sponge. Speaking of tire gel, Optimum Opti Bond is awesome stuff! Lasts forever, nice satin shine, doesn't attract dust/dirt and still has a decent look even after the next wash.

Also, Blackfire, DP, and WG tire gel's all look good too. Still like Optimum the best, but use DP or BF here and there.
As for that buffer......
Honestly... there isn't anything that F150 would need that a GG6 can't do. Get a 3" backing plate, and a 5" plate and you're covered. (
Note below on how to get a 5" plate along with a "kit" that has microfiber pads as well as compound and polish.)
Hint... wink wink - nod nod... you can find a 30% off code on the GG6 at Advance Auto Parts, making it under a hundred bucks.

(
Nick said recently that AG will honor that deal btw.) :dunno:
I'd forget about the yellow pads though, especially with black paint. You *might* need them once (on a vehicle with HARD paint) for that first correction, then you'll probably never need them again.
What I would do, ESPECIALLY with that big of a vehicle, is get AT LEAST 4 orange, 4 white, 2 blue and 2 black pads. Better yet would be 6 orange, 6 (or 8) white, then blue, black, and maybe a couple red.
Oh... and you'll only want to buy 5½" pads. Not because the GG6 can't spin them, (
because it can) but because they are a good bit cheaper than the larger pads.
You of course might want a large throw machine, if so I'd seriously look at the new offerings from Griot, but you really don't want anything larger than a 15mm orbit. Plus you want to stay with the smaller pads.
Then of course there are two more that fit the 'middle', that would be the Rupes Duetto (12mm throw) and the Flex 3401 (8mm throw but gear driven). I have them both, and they are drastically different machines. The Duetto is smooth as buttah... but no as powerful as the GG6. Where the 3401 is a beast and will correct like crazy, but you'll KNOW you've been running that puppy after a few hours. It's a big, heavy, torque monster that takes two hands to run. Whereas the Duetto you can run with one hand all day. Go figure. (
FWIW... you can run the GG6 one handed as well.)
Compounds??? Polishes???
Do you want to use SMAT based or DAT based products?
SMAT = Meguair's
M101, M100, or Ultimate Compound for heavy cut, D300 almost as heavy cut (actually a bit more than UC probably), but can finish decent. D300 was formulated for the Mequiar's microfiber pads but works great with foam pads. It's become my favorite Megs compound these last few years. Plus... it smells like cinnamon!

M205, Ultimate Polish, D301 all are great polishes.
DAT = Menzerna, Wolfgang, Blackfire etc.
FG400 for heavy cut, but is amazing how well it'll finish down. (WG Uber, similar indeed.)
IP2000 for medium cut to final finishing
FF4000 for super slick, super glossy finishing
Those three would do anything you'll run across.
If you'd like to try something along with foam pads to practice your 'art'... I'd suggest the Meguiar's Microfiber Correction Kit. It has 2 cutting, and 2 finishing pads, along with a bottle of D300 and another of D301 PLUS it has a Meguiar's 5" backing plate that is designed to work with their pads. As and added 'bonus' they throw in a Meguiar's Detailing Apron so you can look snazzy while making that F150 sizzle.
One thing to consider along with all the above. You'll need spray bottles, lots and lots of spray bottles. The Meguiar's bottles from AG are the best deal on a quality bottle and sprayer you'll find. You can get them already labeled or generic. Figure a dozen there should be a good start.
What to put in those bottles?????
Meguiar's Non Acid Wheel and Tire Cleaner for one!:dblthumb2:
A good APC is another one. Mix your APC in 2 different dilutions, for really dirty and general duty use.
Then you'll need the one thing that almost everyone has, and that is a spray wax/sealant/drying aide. Hard to beat Duragloss Aquawax! Get it, get it GET IT.

Maybe a gallon of window cleaner? Megs can help ya' there.
Shampoo... Duragloss 901 for a nice clean, slick surface, rinses clear.
Want ultimate suds... Meguiar's Hyper Wash has the thickest suds EVER.
Chemical Guys Honeydew or Mr. Pink would be somewhere in between these two. (
FWIW I use all of them, and mix Megs and one of the others in the foam cannon for CRAZY good foam.)
That brings you do LSP's. Oh Lordy are there a bunch of choices there. Sealants, hybrids, coatings, just sell a kidney and get on with it already!!!!! :laughing:
Finally... you'll need something to wipe all this stuff off with. Towels, lots and LOTS of towels. Microfiber towels can end up costing you darned near what open heart surgery would run, so shop VERY carefully.
For interior, and dirty work. WalMart, or better yet, Costco and you're set. You can get a 36 pack of Kirkland 'gold' towels for under $15 (with tax). Just make SURE you wash them twice before using them, and remove the sewn in tags. They are cheap enough to where when they get dirty you just toss them. I'd never use them for paint work though, except in the door/trunk/hood jambs, around hinges, door locks etc.
Microfiber Tech and The Rag Company has by far the best, safest, and most affordable offerings. (
There are of course the "German" companies but... be prepared to sell an organ.) If I had to have only 3 towels it'd be the Microfiber Tech 360's, 530's and Korean 500's as they'll do anything you need, including drying (with the 530's). Can't say that I actually DO make that work however.
Bottom line is you'll need a couple dozen of each of your most used towels. If that is the 360 and 530 then yup... get a couple dozen of each. You can get around with less of the Korean's if you want, say if you're only using them for QD duties, but even then you'd do good to have 5~6.
Of course there are the Korean waffle weave towels Ian has, which are the best waffle weave's I've seen. One exception to the 'drying towel' would be the Cobra Guzzler (foam core) which nobody else has except Autogeek. It is by and large the most absorbent towel of it's type out there.
Just be careful with ANY drying that you don't 'wipe', but just lay the towel flat and pat (and/or rub) the back of it with an open hand. Do that with the Korean waffle weave or the Guzzler and you're set. (
Or even the Dry Me a River although it's a good bit stiffer/less soft than the others.) Although there is a new "pluffle" at TRC that looks like it'd be close in softness to the Korean waffle weave from MFT.
Not that those are the ONLY decent towels, because there are plenty to choose from. The "White Whale" is crazy soft, as well as plush... but I shudder to think about getting mine dirty. :laughing: I can say that the Korean edgeless from MFT are a bit thicker, softer, heavier than the Eagle edgeless from TRC. They are both close, and the first generation of Korean 470's from MFT were nowhere NEAR what they are now (n
ow they are more of a 513 GSM towel) but MFT still wins there.
Then there are the super thick, dual plush towels like the 600, 700, all the way to 1100 and even 1400 weight towels. I can say that the bottom two, no matter where they come from tend to lint. The heavier ones are laminated type towels, two lesser towels sewn together and are not bad, but just hard to work with being so thick, and they get STUPID heavy once they get wet!!!!
The only exception in this group are the advertised "Korean" towels, like the White Whale and similar ones.
And at this stage... maybe it's time to head to the jewelry store. Figure the wife needs a little enticement to keep her happy. :laughing: