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» Autogeek Car Care Products
Porter Cable 7424 & Pad Kit with CCS pads!
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  #1  
Old 04-24-2007, 06:52 PM
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Why aggressive pads?

I’m kind of baffled how aggressive people get with their pad selections. Using an LC green or yellow pad or Edge orange, green or yellow pads is like taking sandpaper to the car, IMO. I see no reason to go this aggressive on pads. I would much rather see someone bump up to a stronger polish verses going to a stronger pad.

Pads are going to be aggressive no matter what. Polishes, on the other hand, usually have diminishing abrasives which brake down over time. This means that the polish or compound starts off aggressive but over time it breaks down into a fine polish, usually leaving the finish without deep micro-marring. That is if you don’t use an aggressive pad…

A coarse pad is going to cut the paint at the same rate whether you are just starting to polish or finishing up. Most likely you are going to be cutting the paint so much that you’ll leave the dreaded micro-marring. So now you’ll have to use another aggressive polish to cut through your micro-marring. BUT, chances are, if you used a less aggressive pad to begin with, you wouldn’t need the second polishing stage which means you will be saving precious clear coat. This may not be the case for everyone, but I find that if I can’t polish out some swirls with an aggressive polish and a polishing pad, that it is safer to live with them verses risking going to strong. Or simply go over the vehicle once again with the same product / pad combo...

Every car and situation is different though, but if you have to use a cutting pad on your vehicles a few times a year, then you may want to work on your washing techniques. This is just some food for thought that I have generated after a steady month of reading on this site.

The old verbiage of “use the least aggressive polish first” should be something like “use the least aggressive polish and pad first, if that doesn’t work, use a stronger polish, if that doesn’t work, do another pass with the same polish, if that doesn’t work, bump back on the polish and go to a stronger pad, and so on.” That quote is from me .

Sorry this has gotten so long, maybe it is just me but I feel that using a stronger polish isn’t as detrimental as using a stronger pad. If a polish isn’t removing what you want, you may want to look into a different polish vs. using a cutting pad.
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  #2  
Old 04-24-2007, 06:56 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by budman3
I’m kind of baffled how aggressive people get with their pad selections. Using an LC green or yellow pad or Edge orange, green or yellow pads is like taking sandpaper to the car, IMO. I see no reason to go this aggressive on pads. I would much rather see someone bump up to a stronger polish verses going to a stronger pad.

Pads are going to be aggressive no matter what. Polishes, on the other hand, usually have diminishing abrasives which brake down over time. This means that the polish or compound starts off aggressive but over time it breaks down into a fine polish, usually leaving the finish without deep micro-marring. That is if you don’t use an aggressive pad…

A coarse pad is going to cut the paint at the same rate whether you are just starting to polish or finishing up. Most likely you are going to be cutting the paint so much that you’ll leave the dreaded micro-marring. So now you’ll have to use another aggressive polish to cut through your micro-marring. BUT, chances are, if you used a less aggressive pad to begin with, you wouldn’t need the second polishing stage which means you will be saving precious clear coat. This may not be the case for everyone, but I find that if I can’t polish out some swirls with an aggressive polish and a polishing pad, that it is safer to live with them verses risking going to strong. Or simply go over the vehicle once again with the same product / pad combo...

Every car and situation is different though, but if you have to use a cutting pad on your vehicles a few times a year, then you may want to work on your washing techniques. This is just some food for thought that I have generated after a steady month of reading on this site.

The old verbiage of “use the least aggressive polish first” should be something like “use the least aggressive polish and pad first, if that doesn’t work, use a stronger polish, if that doesn’t work, do another pass with the same polish, if that doesn’t work, bump back on the polish and go to a stronger pad, and so on.” That quote is from me .

Sorry this has gotten so long, maybe it is just me but I feel that using a stronger polish isn’t as detrimental as using a stronger pad. If a polish isn’t removing what you want, you may want to look into a different polish vs. using a cutting pad.
what i cant understand is why does xmt light swirl removel recommend starting with an orange pad then white? orange is so aggressive . isnt it??
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  #3  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by budman3
I’m kind of baffled how aggressive people get with their pad selections. Using an LC green or yellow pad or Edge orange, green or yellow pads is like taking sandpaper to the car, IMO. I see no reason to go this aggressive on pads. I would much rather see someone bump up to a stronger polish verses going to a stronger pad.

Pads are going to be aggressive no matter what. Polishes, on the other hand, usually have diminishing abrasives which brake down over time. This means that the polish or compound starts off aggressive but over time it breaks down into a fine polish, usually leaving the finish without deep micro-marring. That is if you don’t use an aggressive pad…

A coarse pad is going to cut the paint at the same rate whether you are just starting to polish or finishing up. Most likely you are going to be cutting the paint so much that you’ll leave the dreaded micro-marring. So now you’ll have to use another aggressive polish to cut through your micro-marring. BUT, chances are, if you used a less aggressive pad to begin with, you wouldn’t need the second polishing stage which means you will be saving precious clear coat. This may not be the case for everyone, but I find that if I can’t polish out some swirls with an aggressive polish and a polishing pad, that it is safer to live with them verses risking going to strong. Or simply go over the vehicle once again with the same product / pad combo...

Every car and situation is different though, but if you have to use a cutting pad on your vehicles a few times a year, then you may want to work on your washing techniques. This is just some food for thought that I have generated after a steady month of reading on this site.

The old verbiage of “use the least aggressive polish first” should be something like “use the least aggressive polish and pad first, if that doesn’t work, use a stronger polish, if that doesn’t work, do another pass with the same polish, if that doesn’t work, bump back on the polish and go to a stronger pad, and so on.” That quote is from me .

Sorry this has gotten so long, maybe it is just me but I feel that using a stronger polish isn’t as detrimental as using a stronger pad. If a polish isn’t removing what you want, you may want to look into a different polish vs. using a cutting pad.
NICE WRITE UP....Ive often thought the same. i did consider one pad and different grades of polish.....

Foamed Wool 6.5 inch Polishing/Buffing Pads
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  #4  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by trhland
what i cant understand is why does xmt light swirl removel recommend starting with an orange pad then white? orange is so aggressive . isnt it??
I agree. Just remember that every manufacturer has different colored pads. The only time I've used an orange LC pad (light cut) is with PwS and it left micromarring, or with OHC on my rotary on very, very swirled paint or on sanded surfaces. If the product isn't strong enough for the job, switch to another polish, not the pad, of course this is all of my opinion though...
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  #5  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by budman3
I agree. Just remember that every manufacturer has different colored pads. The only time I've used an orange LC pad (light cut) is with PwS and it left micromarring, or with OHC on my rotary on very, very swirled paint or on sanded surfaces. If the product isn't strong enough for the job, switch to another polish, not the pad, of course this is all of my opinion though...
i only use optimum . and they only make one polish or compound . seems like compound would be in the worst case situation. what ive been useing mostly is a green foam pad and optimums polish. not sure what brand the foam pad is got it with the p/c it like a medium pad but softer then l/c orange pad. been pretty happy with results
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  #6  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:23 PM
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the reason for the more agressive pads is the pore size of the pads allow the polish to work longer...a finer pore pad will diminish aggressive polishes much quicker than a pad with open pores....tighter pores dont allow the abrassive to tumble around but instead presses them up against the paint and diminishes them as they rotate around...so the agressive correction properties of the polish are quickly worked away...

the trade off is the scratches it leaves behind beacause the pores are not as close to each other.... so the marks they leave behind, which we refer to as micromarring, are not as close to each other as say a blue pad that has a very tight and dense pore distribution...even finishing pads scratch the surface but at such a microscopic level the human eye doesnt really pick it up...
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  #7  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:36 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orngez
the reason for the more agressive pads is the pore size of the pads allow the polish to work longer...a finer pore pad will diminish aggressive polishes much quicker than a pad with open pores....tighter pores dont allow the abrassive to tumble around but instead presses them up against the paint and diminishes them as they rotate around...so the agressive correction properties of the polish are quickly worked away...

the trade off is the scratches it leaves behind beacause the pores are not as close to each other.... so the marks they leave behind, which we refer to as micromarring, are not as close to each other as say a blue pad that has a very tight and dense pore distribution...even finishing pads scratch the surface but at such a microscopic level the human eye doesnt really pick it up...
The LC CCS pads are supposed to be closed cell pads and people are having longer work in times? So I don't think the work in time has anything to do with pore size. If anything the open pores would dry out a product making it not work as long. I agree that everything that touches paint is abrasive but the extent of this is very different. A cutting pad will cut the clear and leave micromarring which can be difficult to remove. So why bother with the cutting pad when a different pad and polish combo can get better results without the micromarring?

Another quote I forgot to mention "Let the product do the work" ...
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  #8  
Old 04-24-2007, 07:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by budman3
The LC CCS pads are supposed to be closed cell pads and people are having longer work in times? So I don't think the work in time has anything to do with pore size. If anything the open pores would dry out a product making it not work as long. I agree that everything that touches paint is abrasive but the extent of this is very different. A cutting pad will cut the clear and leave micromarring which can be difficult to remove. So why bother with the cutting pad when a different pad and polish combo can get better results without the micromarring?

Another quote I forgot to mention "Let the product do the work" ...
you are taking the term closed cell a little wrong budman....the closed cell structure allows for the ccs pads to have larger pores in them...the collapsed or closed cell structure is in reference to the swiss cheese like structure of the ccs pads...the closed cells are not on the polishing surface but are in the "holes" of the swiss cheese makeup of the pad...so the foam that is in contact with polishing the paint is open cell foam and the holes that allow th polish to store and allow the polish to work without pressure from the pad are the closed holes that are recessed into the pad....those closed cell structures act like huge pores which allow the polish to do the work rather than the pad...and it stores polish in them rather than absorbing it.....so the ccs big pore structure is allowing the polish to do the work ...so pore size does have something to do with polishing...you will not get the most out of an aggresive polish without the bigger pore size...some defect need an agressive polish to wear it down to a level a finer polish can correct
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Last edited by orngez : 04-24-2007 at 07:56 PM.
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  #9  
Old 04-24-2007, 08:03 PM
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Well I haven't used them and just based it off of the info that I've recieved here.. thanks for clearing the CCS part up.
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  #10  
Old 04-24-2007, 09:45 PM
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im gonna do a test wen i get my new pads
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