Re: DA Polisher holograms
Anyone?
I was thinking of trying Menzerna sf3500 with a white hexlogic pad.
Re: DA Polisher holograms
Holograms are usually associated
with using Rotary polishers.
IMO:
What you're most likely seeing is/are
some DA haze and/or micro-marring:
DA-quirks, sometimes encountered
by: either using too much down-force;
over working the product ("dry" buffing);
etc.
Bob
Re: DA Polisher holograms
Hard to say from the pictures but my guess is micro-marring.
When you use an orbital polisher and it leaves micro-marring, you can usually see a pattern in dark colored paints that mimic the direction the polisher was moved over the paint. These patterns are the micro-marring.
The term holograms is the wrong word.
Holograms = The specific scratch pattern put into paint by a rotary buffer
So if you're not using a rotary buffer you're not instilling holograms but micro-marring. I've used and seen others use the term,
Shadow effect
Buffer trails
For the micro-marring patterns left in the paint and I'm all for coming up with a specifc word to describe micro-marring from orbital polishers to distinguish and separate it from holograms from a rotary buffer. I might even have the word/term already established in one of my how-to books.
:)
Re: DA Polisher holograms
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kodakdave
Anyone?
I was thinking of trying Menzerna sf3500 with a white hexlogic pad.
My guess is this might fix it.
The polish will probably remove the micro-marring instilled by the M205 and the hexlogix pad.
If it were me? I'd go with flat foam pads. Anytime you introduce a "design" to the face of the pad you increase the potential for something to go wrong. What you want is 100% flat surface in 100% contact with the paint.
:)
Re: DA Polisher holograms
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mike Phillips
My guess is this might fix it.
The polish will probably remove the micro-marring instilled by the M205 and the hexlogix pad.
If it were me? I'd go with flat foam pads. Anytime you introduce a "design" to the face of the pad you increase the potential for something to go wrong. What you want is 100% flat surface in 100% contact with the paint.
:)
Thanks! this does make sense, im going to pick some of these flat pads up.
Sorry for the bad pictures this is very hard to capture on a camera but easy to with eyes maybe this enlarged picture will help https://www.autogeekonline.net/forum...cons/icon7.png.
http://puu.sh/wM9KQ/d33b8d63af.jpg
So basically micro marring are thousands of "tick marks" that i'm seeing right now, and Holograms is what my dealer installed on my car when i just bought it?
http://puu.sh/wM96l/2bfd9152c7.jpg
Lastly i would like to know if i need to worry about my cc's thickness i never compounded my car, but i am worried about my hood because of these holograms that my dealer put into it, so i just polished the whole car twice with v38 and once with Ultimate Polish in 2 years.
Thanks for all this information! https://www.autogeekonline.net/forum...cons/icon7.png https://www.autogeekonline.net/forum...ons/icon14.png
Re: DA Polisher holograms
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kodakdave
So basically micro marring are thousands of "tick marks" that i'm seeing right now, and Holograms is what my dealer installed on my car when i just bought it?
Yes.
I've had micro-marring happen with M205 and the V products.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kodakdave
Lastly i would like to know if i need to worry about my cc's thickness i never compounded my car, but i am worried about my hood because of these holograms that my dealer put into it, so i just polished the whole car twice with v38 and once with Ultimate Polish in 2 years.
You're good.
The thing you want to do AFTER removing the holograms is wash the care carefully and keep it protected. Avoid things that put scratches back into the paint causing you to have to compound again or over and over again.
I'd do some testing with your Menzerna polish and some clean, soft foam flat pads.
Menzerna = good stuff
:)