PDA

View Full Version : High Humidity: PF2500 vs M205



conman1395
07-20-2014, 12:26 AM
I'm in Kansas City and humidity is high. I'm going to do a 1 stage polish tomorrow (maybe 2 cars) and I'm trying to decide which polish to use. Menzerna's PF2500 or M205?
Again, keep in mind I've used both and like both, but I've never used either in high humidity.

allenk4
07-20-2014, 12:32 AM
High humidity should not affect either of those products

Low humidity, especially with high temps however can cause issues with Compounds dusting excessively and not being able to get more than a couple of passes out of them

mwoolfso
07-20-2014, 12:33 AM
If any of the cars are ceramiclear then PF2500 is the way to go. Other than that do a test spot with each and make your choice based on the results.

conman1395
07-20-2014, 12:35 AM
Cool, thank you both.

FUNX650
07-20-2014, 12:52 AM
•Neither product should be adversely affected by a high relative humidity reading.
•What's the expected air temperature and "dew point"?

•You be careful in this type of weather:
-Sweat doesn't evaporate as well (affects internal body temp. controller)
-Stay hydrated
-Take breaks

Bob

conman1395
07-20-2014, 01:00 AM
Neither product should be adversely affected by a high relative humidity reading.
What's the expected air temperature and "dew point"?

•You be careful in this type of weather:
-Sweat doesn't evaporate as well (affects internal body temp. controller)
-Stay hydrated
-Take breaks

Bob

About 66% humidity and dew points pretty close (+/- 15 degrees) to air temps.
Yeah, I'm aware of what working in the garage is gonna feel like (doesn't ever make it easier though). I found a Rubbermaid orange water cooler (like the ones that holds the Gatorade on the sidelines) that I plan on filling up.

The Critic
07-21-2014, 03:34 PM
What machine, what paint, level of correction desired, etc

??