Is all the polishing compound Dialux? I'm sorry but you are wrong. I was a jeweller. The white is pre-polish. Usually it used after the brown or black compound (Dialux). The green and red is softer (finisher). Red is softer than the green one (this you are right). You can see the chart on the internet. Sorry for my terrible English, i hope you understand.
Thanks for that…. I just ordered a bench buffer and a set of 4 different jewelry compounds. I had seen people saying the red was the finest cut - but you see so many people just using the white or green.
@@kctyphoon You're very welcome. I think people are just lazy to use the red because it will leave some residue (because it's so soft and kinda sticky) and you need to wash it with ultrasonic cleaner or soap water with soft brush (because sometimes the red residue cannot go with only water, you need to brush or wipe it).
I'm looking at a buffering kit right now that I just bought and states: red rouge is used for polishinh and enhancing the color of gold, silver and platinum. White rouge is used for polishing copper, brass, aluminum, steel, iron, nickel, chrome plate, gold, silver and platinum.
If you are a professional you should get a better dremel with the extension and more fine - tuneable power setting / rpm control. Your clients probably expect a little more than a 30 dollar tool. Also if you have aflat sourface like here, a dremel might not be the best choice, rather do it by hand to stay paralel to the plane.