vintageb3
21st July 2007, 01:29 AM
I bought a PC 7424 on ebay after seeing Baz's PC and the results he had managed to get with his car last weekend up in Arbroath.
Baz's car looked great after he had polished it...so I thought i would go ahead and get one. I have more than one use for this machine...we can use it for polishing furniture that we have finished too...
It's a good machine and its actually very easy to use. Baz told me that he had been given advice on a detailing site that Menzerna polish was the way to go...so I ordered a kit from Clean and Shiny online.
Some guys go to a scrappy and buy a bonnet to practise on...I already had two just lying here waiting for some practise. OK...they just happen to be fixed to both our vans:D
My van was one reason that i wanted a PC. It needs a good polish to remove oxidation. So...I started on my red van's bonnet. I clayed it first. Then used the medium cut polish and medium cut pad. I was quite pleased with the results. I removed all the swirls and all the oxidation...but there were still some deeper scratches there. I now know that I have to go back with a heaver cut polish to remedy these scratches. Tonight I filled all the stone chips and some of the deep scratches on my bonnet...so next stage is to wet sand the stone chips etc. and then hopefully polish them out. I was really just using this first stage to get to grips with the machine. Of course you should fix the serious paint-work defects before polishing...but I was wanting to see some results...so was just testing.
I had a go on our other van...its white...and we just resprayed it a few months ago. The pigments in white paint are the hardest pigments. (black has the softest). I went straight for the cutting pad and stepped up to the heaviest polish I have in the kit. This is still polish...not cutting compound though.
Again I was able to remove all the swirls and then finished with one of the other finishing polishes. There were still some scratches on the paint but all the swirls were gone. The paint had a nice gloss.
I noticed the swirls are very circular...and sanding marks are straight...since this is of course the way that you hand sand. The swirls on this bonnet were caused by using a Halfords rotary polisher with a lamb wools bonnet.:(
We've found out that the polish I have will take out 2000 grit sanding marks. My Dad had been hand sanding the bonnet with 400 grit paper and those are why the scratches are still visable. 400 paper isn't all that heavy either. Its what's used to rub down before you spray a primer coat...2000 must be like cheque paper!:eek: :D
I read somewhere that polish is just sandpaper in a liquid form. Its a good way to think about it really. If you are sanding...you start with a heavy grit...and finish with a fine grit for the best results. So its the same with the PC.
I hope to be able to pick up some 2000, wet sand the bonnet and experiment with the removal of those sanding marks with the PC.
At the end of the day...I hope to be able to fill any paint chips on my Mini bonnet and be able to polish them out. I think it will be very possible to achieve this.
I may do the whole car at some point....but its really just stone chips on the bonnet that bug me.
The PC is a good tool. It would be very difficult to do damage to your paintwork. It takes a PC 10 times longer to do the same job as a rotary...so this builds in a lot of room for operator error/experimenting/the learning curve.
We even experimented with trying to burn the paint. It does take a lot of pressure to get the paint hot...and even then...we didn't burn the paint. I wouldn't recommend that anyone else try this. We have the facility to re-spray...and after all...its only a van.
John asked how much the PC was. It was £145 for the PC and a Sonus foam pad kit and two polishing bonnets. The Menzerna polish was about £40 I think. I bought the 110VAC transformer through a trade outlet...and don't know how much that will be until the invoice comes in. Maybe £50.00 I also bought 110VAC connectors and cable through a trade source...and don't know how much they will be either. Maybe £10.00
mark
Baz's car looked great after he had polished it...so I thought i would go ahead and get one. I have more than one use for this machine...we can use it for polishing furniture that we have finished too...
It's a good machine and its actually very easy to use. Baz told me that he had been given advice on a detailing site that Menzerna polish was the way to go...so I ordered a kit from Clean and Shiny online.
Some guys go to a scrappy and buy a bonnet to practise on...I already had two just lying here waiting for some practise. OK...they just happen to be fixed to both our vans:D
My van was one reason that i wanted a PC. It needs a good polish to remove oxidation. So...I started on my red van's bonnet. I clayed it first. Then used the medium cut polish and medium cut pad. I was quite pleased with the results. I removed all the swirls and all the oxidation...but there were still some deeper scratches there. I now know that I have to go back with a heaver cut polish to remedy these scratches. Tonight I filled all the stone chips and some of the deep scratches on my bonnet...so next stage is to wet sand the stone chips etc. and then hopefully polish them out. I was really just using this first stage to get to grips with the machine. Of course you should fix the serious paint-work defects before polishing...but I was wanting to see some results...so was just testing.
I had a go on our other van...its white...and we just resprayed it a few months ago. The pigments in white paint are the hardest pigments. (black has the softest). I went straight for the cutting pad and stepped up to the heaviest polish I have in the kit. This is still polish...not cutting compound though.
Again I was able to remove all the swirls and then finished with one of the other finishing polishes. There were still some scratches on the paint but all the swirls were gone. The paint had a nice gloss.
I noticed the swirls are very circular...and sanding marks are straight...since this is of course the way that you hand sand. The swirls on this bonnet were caused by using a Halfords rotary polisher with a lamb wools bonnet.:(
We've found out that the polish I have will take out 2000 grit sanding marks. My Dad had been hand sanding the bonnet with 400 grit paper and those are why the scratches are still visable. 400 paper isn't all that heavy either. Its what's used to rub down before you spray a primer coat...2000 must be like cheque paper!:eek: :D
I read somewhere that polish is just sandpaper in a liquid form. Its a good way to think about it really. If you are sanding...you start with a heavy grit...and finish with a fine grit for the best results. So its the same with the PC.
I hope to be able to pick up some 2000, wet sand the bonnet and experiment with the removal of those sanding marks with the PC.
At the end of the day...I hope to be able to fill any paint chips on my Mini bonnet and be able to polish them out. I think it will be very possible to achieve this.
I may do the whole car at some point....but its really just stone chips on the bonnet that bug me.
The PC is a good tool. It would be very difficult to do damage to your paintwork. It takes a PC 10 times longer to do the same job as a rotary...so this builds in a lot of room for operator error/experimenting/the learning curve.
We even experimented with trying to burn the paint. It does take a lot of pressure to get the paint hot...and even then...we didn't burn the paint. I wouldn't recommend that anyone else try this. We have the facility to re-spray...and after all...its only a van.
John asked how much the PC was. It was £145 for the PC and a Sonus foam pad kit and two polishing bonnets. The Menzerna polish was about £40 I think. I bought the 110VAC transformer through a trade outlet...and don't know how much that will be until the invoice comes in. Maybe £50.00 I also bought 110VAC connectors and cable through a trade source...and don't know how much they will be either. Maybe £10.00
mark