• If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

    Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post


    A few questions just to make sure I'm doing things right.

    1. The hard scratches and swirls are virtually gone. Although, it appears that the M105 with the yellow polishing foam pad are leaving very tiny microscopic swirl marks. They are very tough to see, and you have to have a bright light right up against the paint with your head down there to really see them in my garage. I don't know if they will be noticeable in direct sunlight, I might back the car out of the garage once done and see. Is this normal, and will a light pass with M205 decrease their visibility or eliminate them?
    There is no normal, every paint system buffs differently, some paints buff really great and some don't, what works great on one paint might not always work great on a different paint, that's why it's important to test like you're doing.

    If the M105 is leaving fine swirls then go ahead and try the M205 with a finishing pad next. Do a Test Spot so you can compare the M205 results with the M105 results. Usually the hood is a good place to do your test so you can look down on the finish when inspecting.


    Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post
    2. After I finish up with M205, could I still use a glaze like Show Car Glaze to really bring out the depth of the black paint and make it that wet look? Is it even necessary since M205 does sort of the same thing (so I read...)?
    M205 is a light cleaner/polish and M07 is a non-abrasive pure polish, they are very different product but actually product very similar results. If the finish looks great after the M205 then might as well move on to the wax step. Meguiar's always states polishing with a pure polish is an optional step so you can if you want but because M205 takes your paint to maximum clarity, you can skip the #7 step and go to the waxing step.

    Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post
    It's going slow...but making progress. Oh yeah, is it even possible to burn the paint at all with the DA using M105 and the yellow foam pad? When looking real close I seem to have either found burned spots or spots that are very very thin paint. One is all the way across the corner seam on the rear bumper piece and the other is on the trunk up in the corner by the windshield. I've worked the rest of the car and have never seen it anywhere else. It may have been there before as it looks like someone used a rotary on it before....
    If you have paint anywhere on the car that is thin enough that if you were to rub it by hand and go through, then yes a DA Polisher could also burn through this same area. If you're paint is still in good condition then it's usually the least of your worries.

    Mike Phillips
    760-515-0444
    showcargarage@gmail.com

    "Find something you like and use it often"

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

      I tried the M205 last night after the M105 pass with the finishing pad and low speed and it looked exactly the same.

      I'll try again...
      99' FRC Corvette
      08' Sky RedLine

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

        Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post
        I tried the M205 last night after the M105 pass with the finishing pad and low speed and it looked exactly the same.

        I'll try again...

        Low speed is for applying a finishing wax, if you're trying to refine the paint after the heavy compounding step then you want to be using the M205 with the 5.0 speed setting.

        You should be using the 5.0 speed setting for the compound too...

        When you go to apply a finishing wax then you would use the 3.0 speed setting as anything lower than 3 is so slow it can make it more difficult or sluggish to move the pad over the surface.

        Mike Phillips
        760-515-0444
        showcargarage@gmail.com

        "Find something you like and use it often"

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

          I see, and thank you.

          I've been using the wrong speeds then, for starters. Still a little nervous with the machine. I'll try doing another test spot with speed 5 using both compounds and see what it does. I will also try and get good photos this afternoon.
          99' FRC Corvette
          08' Sky RedLine

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

            Read through this and keep these things in mind...

            Here's a list of the most common problems
            1. Trying to work too large of an area at one time.
            2. Move the polisher too fast over the surface.
            3. Too low of speed setting for removing swirls.
            4. Too little pressure on the head of the unit.
            5. Too much pressure on the head of the unit so the pad quits rotating.
            6. Not keeping the pad flat while working your product.
            7. Too much product, too little product.
            8. Not cleaning the pad often enough.
            Here's a list of the solutions in matching order,
            1. Shrink your work area down, the harder the paint the smaller the area you can work. The average area should be and average of about 16" by 16" up to 20" by 20" or so. You have to do some experimenting, (called a Test Spot), to find out how easy or how hard the defects are coming out of your car's paint system and then adjust your work area to the results of your Test Spot.
            2. For removing defects out of the paint you want to use what we call a Slow Arm Speed. It's really easy to move the polisher too quickly because the sound of the motor spinning fast has a psychological effect to for some reason want to make people move the polisher fast. Also the way most people think is that, "If I move the polisher quickly, I'll get done faster", but it doesn't work that way.
            3. When first starting out many people are scared of burning or swirling their paint, so they take the safe route of running the polisher at too low of a speed setting, again... this won't work. The action of the polisher is already g-e-n-t-l-e, you need the speed and specifically the pad rotating over the paint as well as the combination of time, (slow arm speed), together with the diminishing abrasives, the foam type, and the pressure to remove small particles of paint which is how your remove below surface defects like swirls or scratches. It's a leveling process that's somewhat difficult because the tool is safe/gentle while in most cases, modern clear coat paints are harder than traditional single stage paints and this makes them hard to work on. This is also why people get frustrated, they don't understand paint technology, all they know is their paint swirls easy and getting the swirls out is difficult and thus frustrating.
            4. For the same reason as stated in #3, people are scared, or perhaps a better word is apprehensive, to apply too much pressure and the result of too little pressure is no paint is removed thus no swirls are removed.
            5. Just the opposite of item #4, people think that by pushing harder on the polisher they can work faster and be more aggressive, but the truth is the clutch in the tool is a safety mechanism to prevent burning and will cause the pad to stop rotating, thus less cleaning or abrading action and once in a while this will lead a person to then post on the forum something like this, "Hey my pad doesn't rotate". There needs to be a balance of enough pressure to remove defects and keep the pad rotating but yet not too much pressure as to stop the rotating action. This balance is affected by a lot of things, things like type of chemical, some chemicals provide more lubrication and the pad will spin easier, curved surfaces or any raise in body lines will tend to stop the pad from rotating. This is where experience on how to address these areas comes into play or you do the best you can and move on. It's not a perfect tool, nor a perfect system, but it's almost always better than working/cleaning by hand.
            6. Applying pressure in such a way as to put too much pressure to one side of the pad will cause it to stop rotating and thus decrease cleaning ability.
            7. Too much product over lubricates the surface and this won't allow the diminishing abrasives to do their job plus it will increase the potential for messy splatter as well as cause pad saturation. Too little product will keep the pad from rotating due to no lubrication and there won't be enough diminishing abrasives to do any work. Again it's a balance that comes with experience, or another way of saying this would be it's a balance that comes with hours of buffing out a car to learn what to do and what not to do. Information like what you're reading here is just an edge to decrease your learning curve. Hope this is helping.
            8. Most people don't clean their pad often enough and most of the time the reason for this is because they don't know they're supposed to clean their pad often and they don't know how to clean their pad. Again, that's why this forum is here to help you with both of these things. You should clean your pad after every application of product or every other application of product, your choice, most of the time cleaning your pad after every other application of product works pretty well. It enables you to work clean and enables the foam pad, the polisher and the next application of fresh product too all work effectively. How to clean your pad will be addressed below sooner versus later, but not at the time of this posting. (Sorry, I'm behind a keyboard, not a video camera
            The first 4 are the most common.
            Mike Phillips
            760-515-0444
            showcargarage@gmail.com

            "Find something you like and use it often"

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

              Just used both M105 and M205 with speed 5, both with the yellow pad. Here are some photos of the before/after, just don't mind the fingerprints in the first image where I bumped the car when adjusting the focus.

              After M105


              After M205



              I took some great videos as well, uploading then now to YouTube so maybe someone can "see" what I might be doing wrong. Also, some specs of dust/compound particles can be seen...working in a small garage.
              99' FRC Corvette
              08' Sky RedLine

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                Here are the video demonstrations I created of using both the M105 and M205 products:

                M105 Process
                Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


                M205 Process
                http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elcjhGGgxuw
                99' FRC Corvette
                08' Sky RedLine

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                  Hi Matt,

                  Good talking to you on the phone, as we discussed,

                  For anytime you're using a DA Polisher, start out by spreading the product out over the area you're going to work so you have a uniform layer of fresh/new product on the area you're going to work - then start making your overlapping passes.

                  This insures a uniform cut for your first initial pass.

                  Remember, after you make your initial passes where most of the cutting is being done, (the first 4 passes or so), after that lighten up so you have just a little more than the weight of the polisher on the face of the pad.

                  Keep in mind, polishing paint is an art form not a simple grinding process. You're doing good, just keep focusing on the task at hand and perfect your technique.

                  Next, for your M205 application, switch to a softer finishing pad, turn your speed down to the 4.0 to 4.5 speed setting, (On the G110), and again, make your initial cutting passes to remove whatever the M105 process is leaving behind and then after the first 4-6 passes, make another two passes with less pressure.

                  Never buff to a dry buff and always wipe any excess product off immediately while it's hopefully still wet/moist using a premium quality microfiber polishing cloth.

                  Mike Phillips
                  760-515-0444
                  showcargarage@gmail.com

                  "Find something you like and use it often"

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                    This is crazy, just can't seem to get that micro-marring to go away. Maybe the paint is just too sensitive? Ive tried using the finishing pad, spreading the product first, using little more than machine pressure, using speed 4, and used 2 complete attempts. Still just as bad.
                    99' FRC Corvette
                    08' Sky RedLine

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                      Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post
                      Here are the video demonstrations I created of using both the M105 and M205 products:

                      M105 Process
                      Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


                      M205 Process
                      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elcjhGGgxuw
                      Demon, I saw the videos and here are a few suggestions...

                      1. I would tape off and mask a specific work area to gauge progress and get side-by-side comparisons of untouched areas so that you can accurately gauge your defect removal. This also prevents getting product on rubber trim and protects other panels. In the M105 video you can see where when you kick on the DA you're getting the pad off the rear deck and slightly onto the rear bumper. That body line has VERY thin paint and some auto tape there would protect against burning through it unknowingly...

                      2. Hand speed looks good but it's hard to tell how much pressure you're using. Moderate pressure on a high speed setting (5 or 6) for the first 4 passes then lighter pressure at the same speed for the next two passes.

                      3. By passes I mean one vertical or horzontal trip around your work area. In the video I would say you completed two passes. You need at least two passes in each direction with moderate pressure followed by one more each direction at less pressure (same machine speed setting) for a total of at least six.

                      4. If you've completed a full application of the M105, then use an IPA wipedown to properly inspect the area. If you're not satisfied with the results give it another application of M105. Just going to M205 isn't going to remove more swirls...it'll only enhance/correct the M105 application.

                      5. As Mike already stated...move on to a different, less aggresive pad for the M205 application. Also, make sure to evenly spread your product over the taped-off work area prior to starting the machine so you get uniform coverage on paint and pad.

                      Keep at it as it sure looks like you're catching on...

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                        The area being worked has no swirls at all left, all that's left is micro-marring from both the M105 and M205 products. At this point, I'm only trying to figure out how to get rid of the micro-marring.

                        As far as taping all of that stuff...well...then I would have to come back across it by hand on the areas the tape covered because the scratches/swirls there were as bad as everywhere else. I'm scared that if I go over it all again by hand it will mess up what I've been trying to so hard to do with the D/A.

                        Also, the defect removal is blatantly obvious. It really is. The portions of the car that I haven't touched at all are covered in hard swirls. The panels that I've compeleted vs the panels I have not...there is a 100% difference. Panels completed only have micro-marring left.

                        I uploaded these videos just to show my technique, to make sure I was doing it right. It doesn't show how many times I've gone over that section. It's been worked....A LOT. I've only been moving on to M205 when all the swirls/scratches are gone and only the Micro-Marring is left.

                        At this point, I've stopped again until I figure out how to get rid of that Micro Marring effect. I can't seem to get it to go away. M205 seems to cause it as well, just not as bad. I'm using up a lot of product here trying to figure this out, getting me a bit nervous seeing that it's $33/bottle.
                        99' FRC Corvette
                        08' Sky RedLine

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                          Originally posted by Demon_C5 View Post
                          The area being worked has no swirls at all left, all that's left is micro-marring from both the M105 and M205 products. At this point, I'm only trying to figure out how to get rid of the micro-marring.
                          I really can't help too much there as I use a different line of pads and have a more extensive line of polishes so I'd keep going less aggressive to progressively chase out the induced marring.

                          As far as taping all of that stuff...well...then I would have to come back across it by hand on the areas the tape covered because the scratches/swirls there were as bad as everywhere else. I'm scared that if I go over it all again by hand it will mess up what I've been trying to so hard to do with the D/A.
                          If properly taped off into sections when you remove the tape from one worked area you'll clearly move on to the next while incorporating the previously small taped section. Think of it like taping in this fashion: [_] with the open top portion being where you just removed tape from an adjacent section. Now when you do the current section you'll also overlap slightly to get the previously taped part (not sure if I confused you more with that explanation...lol).

                          Also, the defect removal is blatantly obvious. It really is. The portions of the car that I haven't touched at all are covered in hard swirls. The panels that I've compeleted vs the panels I have not...there is a 100% difference. Panels completed only have micro-marring left.
                          That's actually a good thing! It means the swirls are gone and the hard part (laborwise) is over and you just need that last, small percentage to make it perfect.

                          I uploaded these videos just to show my technique, to make sure I was doing it right. It doesn't show how many times I've gone over that section. It's been worked....A LOT. I've only been moving on to M205 when all the swirls/scratches are gone and only the Micro-Marring is left.
                          I figured as much just wanted to make sure when you do work you're taking all the necessary steps. I think you're doing great and just need to get that last step figured out to be happy. Good luck and keep asking questions...it's the only way to learn.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                            I just read all the way through this, tons of great info!

                            I may be way off base, but here's my suggestion.
                            Mike or Mark are the professionals here so don't listen to me if they say different!
                            Looking at the micro marring in the last pictures maybe it's time to put on a LSP! I can only suggest what works for me, and thats either MACHINE GLAZE Item Number: M0316 or HI-TECH YELLOW WAX Item Number: M2611
                            I say this because Matt says he has only worked on a couple of panels so far, why not finish off those panels and move on to get the rest of the vette to this level. Plus I think the LSP may fill in for now so he can feel like he has accomplished something....

                            I would hate to see him give up in frustration!

                            He can always pick a spot later to start on it again!
                            Arizona Corvette Enthusiasts
                            08 Atomic Orange Metallic C6 LS3 Z51 4LT
                            98 Torch Red Convertible * SOLD
                            82 Collector Edition * SOLD

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                              why not finish off those panels and move on to get the rest of the vette to this level. Plus I think the LSP may fill in for now so he can feel like he has accomplished something....
                              This might actually be the point I'm at right now. I might just back the car out of the garage this afternoon and try to get it in direct sunlight and see how it looks. If it looks good, I'm moving on. A little afraid that all I've done is trade nasty, glaring hard scratches swirls for billions of tiny cobweb swirls.

                              I'm not entirely convinced yet that this "micro-marring" can actually be completely removed. I guess I would have to see it done on my car to believe it.
                              99' FRC Corvette
                              08' Sky RedLine

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: C5 Vette - 1st DA Use

                                Just getting back to this thread since yesterday...

                                This micro-marring you're experiencing is paint related because it looks like you've gotten all the right techniques down and pad/product combos...

                                This is a good example of what we mean when we post that some paints are more polishable than others, that's how it is and that's why we stress doing test spots so much on this forum.

                                Here's the next thing to try and this usually works by either removing the micro-marring or masking it, you won't know till you try and then inspect the results.

                                Go to any auto parts store or even a store like Target or Walmart and pick up a bottle of ColorX. ColorX is a strong cleaner/wax, it contains diminishing abrasives as well as chemical cleaners and can remove light swirls especially when used by machine.

                                ColorX


                                Shake the bottle well and then use this product just like you're using the M205, that is use it with a finishing pad on the 4.0 to 5.0 speed setting.

                                Work the product 4-6 passes over your test section and the let it dry and then wipe off the dried wax and inspect.

                                This will either remove the micro-marring or mask it or do a little bit of both. The only way to tell would be to chemically strip the surface and inspect the paint closely to see if the micro-marring is gone or not.

                                Chances are good it will remove it, but even if it masks it, if the results look good after the ColorX then the paint will look even better after you apply a second application of a finishing wax like Gold Class, NXT, DCC, M21, M26 etc.

                                Besides ColorX you could also do the above only use a light cleaner/polish like M09 Swirl Remover 2.0 or M82 Swirl Free Polish.

                                Personally I would opt for the ColorX to try next and see how that works plus it's easy to find and very affordable.


                                Keep us updated...
                                Mike Phillips
                                760-515-0444
                                showcargarage@gmail.com

                                "Find something you like and use it often"

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X
                                gtag('config', 'UA-161993-8');