You'll never use Paintwork Polish Enhancer and Finishing Glaze on the same detail.
Just to add to what Nick shared....
Choosing to use a paint cleaner or a fine cut polish is an
either/or decision. You're either going to use one or the other but not both.
If you use a fine cut polish, (that's what Wolfgang Finishing Glaze is, it's a fine cut polish not a glaze but the traditional definition of a a "glaze"), then the fine cut polish will do EVERYTHING the paint cleaner will do PLUS remove any shallow swirls and scratches.
A chemical cleaner only paint cleaner will only clean the surface of light oxidation, road film, staining and other surface impurities but since it's non-abrasive it will not abrade the surface to level it and thus remove swirls and scratches.
So a paint cleaner would be for new cars or cars with like-new paint that don't need any defect removal or correction work performed. A paint cleaner will perfectly prepare the paint for the application of wax or a synthetic paint sealant without removing any of the preciously thin paint on the car.
A fine cut polish would be for cars with light/shallow/fine swirls and scratches or used after a more aggressive compound or polish to maximize the gloss and clarity created by the more aggressive product in a multi-step procedure.
Make sense?
Paint cleaners and fine cut polishes are either/or products, you either use one and not the other, or use the other and not the one.
Following a fine cut polish with a paint cleaner would be
redundant.
Using a paint cleaner before a fine cut polish would be a
waste of time, energy and the paint cleaner.
