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Super Member
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Super Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
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Super Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
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Super Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
I never seen damage like that from a random orbital buffer, the surrounding paint wrinkled like it was not even cured. Need a professional to chime in here ...
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Super Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
That is my thought. Any other burn I have seen on here has been a defined burn mark. I hope I can take it to the dealer and have it fixed as a paint defect...
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Newbie Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
that is insane. i would be at the dealer asap. not sure what you want to say though. but i doubt it should happen unless you really bore down on it?
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Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
Well, if it was already hot from the sun, and you buffed it, that would make the paint even hotter than if you buffed it in the shade or indoors where it is relatively cool. I WOULD ask you if the paint got hot, but as it was in the sun, it probably already WAS. If you had buffed it in the shade where the paint was cool before you started and the paint never got hot and that happened, then there was definitely defective paintwork. If it was already hot, I'm just not sure how much heat paint that is probably water based can take, especially before it is completely cured.
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Super Member
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
It doesn't look like that paint bonded. Looks like when you poke a hole in shrink rap, and it pulls back with crinkles.
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SELF BANNED
Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
It seems the side of the pad dug into the paint and then it just pushed into a clump. This is what will happen on a plastic piece when the edge of a pad grabs the paint. Also the paint being hot from the start just makes it that much easier to wrinkle the paint like in your picture.
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Re: Burning Paint with PC 7424
Originally Posted by ASPHALT ROCKET
It seems the side of the pad dug into the paint and then it just pushed into a clump. This is what will happen on a plastic piece when the edge of a pad grabs the paint. Also the paint being hot from the start just makes it that much easier to wrinkle the paint like in your picture.
Sounds right, just goes to show no matter what kind of buffer you use, be careful!
Autogeek OG. Attended detail fest I/II. Still detailing!
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