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today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
my wife has a 2018 Mercedes Suv....always garage kept.....when she bought the car Mercedes put on some kind of coating...so the car always looks good...but I wanted to make it look better....
my process so far washed it with Wolfgang uber car wash
clayed all the car
used BF one step
did the tires with duragloss 252 tire and rubber dressing
I did this today...next I will do the chrome and trim
I had a situation with lake county blue pads...I had my porta cable on number 5...and the pads were coming apart...not sure why
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Super Member
Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Originally Posted by
weekend warrior
I had a situation with lake county blue pads...I had my porta cable on number 5...and the pads were coming apart...not sure why
Sounds like you may have over-heated them. Still, you might give LC a shout to see what they say.
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Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
What’s the maximum speed on your polisher? Five? Full speed is only for when you are when you’re doing major correction, an AIO works great at 50% speed.
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Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
I used bf one step and the direction said to use 5 speed with the porta cable. I did reduce speed to 3. And used different pads
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Super Member
Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Porter cable you’re fine running at 5 or 6. My guess is one of these:
- used too much product
- worked an area too large
- put too much downward pressure
- didn’t clean/swap pads as often as you should have
Any of the above or a combination of them is recipe for pad failure.
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Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
I think you are right about putting on to much product and doing a larger area than I should. Thanks
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Super Member
Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Heat is the enemy of the pads. So if you think about it, too much product means a lot of liquid and with friction, liquid heats up fast. Working a large area leads to heat because the pad is on the paint for a long time, without the break you’d normally have to wipe off product and reload the pad. Lots of pressure increases friction and that also makes the pad run hotter. Same goes for overworking a pad, it’s getting loaded with spent product and removed clear coat, all of those get it hot. Heat on a pad leads to compromised structure (pad sinks in the middle) or de-lamination where the Velcro separated from the foam part.
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Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Bruno you can be right...I start off putting 3 dime size drops of product normally do half of a hood...then add 3 more drops of product to do the other size...on the panels do the same....I change pads after doing one half of car...
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Super Member
Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Originally Posted by
weekend warrior
Bruno you can be right...I start off putting 3 dime size drops of product normally do half of a hood...then add 3 more drops of product to do the other size...on the panels do the same....I change pads after doing one half of car...
Half a hood is quite large of an area (well, depends on the car). My GTI I break the hood in 6 sections. 3 dime size drops of product sounds right per section but maybe not sections that big. And half a car with the same pad is definitely overworking it. On a GTI I’ll use 5 or 6 pads and that’s just for the 5.5” ones, probably another 4 of the 3.5” pads for areas that are better done with the smaller polisher.
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Super Member
Re: today I started the process of detailing my wife's car
Originally Posted by
weekend warrior
Bruno you can be right...I start off putting 3 dime size drops of product normally do half of a hood...then add 3 more drops of product to do the other size...on the panels do the same....I change pads after doing one half of car...
Are you saying you used one pad for 1/2 of the car?
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