Use 3M Dark Foam Pad Glaze and a buffer at 2,000 RPM Watch your corners and take your time.I think I am going to have to look into this. We get pretty scratched up here in the great white north.
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Thanks for the tipUse 3M Dark Foam Pad Glaze and a buffer at 2,000 RPM Watch your corners and take your time.
Any issues with the buffer creating swirls in the paint?Use 3M Dark Foam Pad Glaze and a buffer at 2,000 RPM Watch your corners and take your time.
If you have good paint and do not over heat an area, no. Foam pad glaze is the easiest of all items to use. If you have a poor re-paint, you can do damage easier. I have showed 30-35 people how to buff like this and never had an issue. I have buffed out 100's of cars and only had an issue with one.... Go figure.Any issues with the buffer creating swirls in the paint?
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Thanks. Might be something the Wrenches and Rides folks have a video for....If you have good paint and do not over heat an area, no. Foam pad glaze is the easiest of all items to use. If you have a poor re-paint, you can do damage easier. I have showed 30-35 people how to buff like this and never had an issue. I have buffed out 100's of cars and only had an issue with one.... Go figure.
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Chemical guys do great videos on it. Look up the Milwaukee M 18 polisher on Workshop Addict.Thanks. Might be something the Wrenches and Rides folks have a video for....
On another note....I want to see that $200k raptor the author speaks about[emoji848]
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Gotcha. Will do it now. God knows I got plenty of scratches.Chemical guys do great videos on it. Look up the Milwaukee M 18 polisher on Workshop Addict.
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