makdaddy626
New member
- Jun 26, 2007
- 901
- 0
How often do you think it's ok to use XMT360 with a PC and white pad? Is 360 abrasive enough to be considered "polishing" to the point where it should be once or twice a year at most process?
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You could do it weekly for years
It has less cut than a finishing polish and you can run a finishing polish/polishing pad/PC over your paint weekly/monthly for years and never have a problem.
Your not removing much, if any at all, clear coat when you compound and polish with a rotary. Using a PC with something like 360 would take years and years and years to remove even a tad of clear.
Can you link some of these *deep scratch* removals using 360?
Ive seen people remove light swirls but not much more than that.
According to some, 360 also fills alot, so dont put to much stock in 360 actually removing all of anything.
Why not just use some halogens and spot polish any fine scratches instead of polishing the whole car.I was mostly thinking about using it as between polishes polish... that is to say, if I'm going to polish (with something like 106ff) every 6 months, maybe half way between, when I would probably do a pain cleaning and re-do my protection anyway, using 360 for a light jeweling and letting the fillers hide any minor blemmishes that might be cropping up?
Anyone think this sounds like "to much"?
yea I dont think anyone should have a schedule for polishing. I think you should do it when it is needed only, and then like Rsurfer said its possible to spot polish as well. If you have good washing/maintenance habits with your car, then polishings should be few and far between IMO.
This is all also very dependant on polish/pad/machine used and most importantly the kind of car, or kind of paint/clear coat.
Then go to a finishing glaze.I was really thinking more to "jewel" the paint...
How would you define "needs it"
I'm trying to decide which proverb to heed...
"An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" - is it better to use a light polish BEFORE it's needed than to wait until you have to use something more agressive.
or the old faithful...
"If it ain't broke, don't fix it" - leave it alone until it needs it.
Let me know if I'm wrong - I'm pretty new to this and not trying to be argumentative.