Hey man good video , I just bought a 6inch polisher and it came with terry cloth and wool cloth. What steps should I follow because it don’t come with a sponge pad
No, it's after clear coat. We put a good amount of clear coat so it allows us to cut and buff as you see here so we can polish it out to perfection 👌 Are you trying to do the same?
Is the 5000 really necessary? In my experience G360 compound removes 1500+ so by finishing with 2000 grit before compounding shouldn’t see much difference? Happy to be corrected if you think otherwise and everyday is a school day!
Professionals no 5000 grit not necessary as they know the compound and cutting power of pad being used. This technique for amateurs cuz they tend not to know what compound or pad to use, so they chasing sand scratches. I make it easier for them on the buffing side by getting them to the finest grit possible.
@@ReveMotoyou don’t need to be a professional to know, each compound today have the grit of sand paper it removes written directly on the bottle .. if it says 1500, you don’t need to go 5000, but 3000 will make it a lot faster to remove
@@MowSow Yes. 5000 is not necessary if you know how to use the buffer/compound properly. I am just stating it makes the job easier. Not stating it needs to go that far per manufacturer recommendation
Hi, I have orange peel on a part that I painted. I sanded it and then I polished it but when I polished it, the color wasn’t shiny and it became a little bit different. I was using an orbit polisher. Any advice and thanks
Agree. Sounds like you went through the top coat. Try a very tiny spot with 1500 wet and dry then G360 fast compound on a cloth backwards and forwards side to side. Buff with clean cloth. If no improvement then you need to prep surface for 2-3 coats base coat and then 2-3 costs of clear.