dlc95
Well-known member
- May 18, 2013
- 6,062
- 26
Thanks everybody for their feedback, it helps clarify things.
One last question, still Recomend the G15 at $260 (retail) over the G9 at $125? Is the difference between the two worth an extra $135?
I'm not sure I can use the long throw on my 750 sqft of enameled aluminum panels as their already thin? I'm not looking to eat through the surface but rather polish it and put a protective finish on it.
I know this last statement sounds counter intitutive as polishing is basically sanding the surface BUT I just did the trailer with the HF, B&S yellow flat pad, HD Uno, on speed 2.5 to 3, if I rotated the pad it ate the enamel/white color off faster and didn't leave a shinny polished surface just made it thiner faster. But...if I stalled out the rotation and just let it vibrate on speed 1 while I made my passes, it'd thin out the enamel slower and it'd leave a nice polished surface faster, and then I could hit it over 3 or 4 more times (re-doing the section, no passes) with same technique and it would polish up real nice and not be as thin as speeding up the pad and letting it rotate. So... In this case (I'm not sure about all enamel panels, or just my 20 yr old prevoiusly polished and oxidized ones) it was much better to not have it rotating. (And yes I tried all kinds of other pad & product combos before the yellow/Uno set up).
Time before the latest one I polished the trailer, I used HD Polish with a B& S Orange pad and it cleaned up and didn't thin out the panels but it didn't really leave a deep, glossy surface. It was shinny but not glossy and it didn't hardly maintain. It was returni g to oxidizing after 2 washes and waxes. So I polished the $#### out of it this time to see if I could create a surface that was easier to maintain and keep from reverting back to oxidising.
Which is why I advocate the use of just the PC/HF style tool. Sounds like you already have what you need to get the job done. You can further decrease aggression my using a 6" plate/pad on that tool.
With the 15mm tool you could reduce aggression by keeping the tool speed down, and bring the arm speed (rate at which the polisher is moved over the paint) up.