--- Elijah Scott <imperial1971@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Crestonave@xxxxxxx wrote: I've just acquired one, > with foam pads. Any suggestions on how to use? 1. Find a car that looks like hell, like a buddy's crappo car and start there. Even if you screw up, you'll prbably get a beer out of it if you work it right. 2. put a small/medium glob of polish on the paint and swirl the polisher over the glob, asorbing the glob into the cells of the foam so that the pad carries the polish and to avoid flinging the polish all over the place. 3. You're already committed to the Porter Cable unit and I don't know if it has it, but if you shop for a polisher, compare what you're getting to the Milwaukee unit. I had a Makita and a DeWalt which are both good products. The Milwaukee has a 0 setting that the other's don't have, which is a big deal because you can put the pad on the car, pull the trigger, and rotate the speed adjust to bring the pad S L O W L Y up to speed instead of instantly going from 0-100 rpm (or whatever). 4. Don't spin the thing too fast or stay in the same place too long. You will heat up the paint and either melt it or rub through it. 5. You are essentially sanding your car. You're doing it in a fine manner, but as with sanding a car to prime it, you start with coarse-cut compound and a coarse pad (presuming that the paint isn't shiny and is coarse itself). As with sanding, you're sanding down to the lowest common denominator in the surface. Once you get there, switch to the softer, less-coarse pad and polish. They call the goo "Cutting Compound" and "Polishing Compound". That is preferring to grit - use accordingly. 6. Get your supplies from the place that supplies the local auto body shops (!!!) and ASK ADVICE. The IML is a good resource up to a point, but talking to someone that is selling you your goods is a powerful thing (especially if they know what they are doing!). 7. Resist the IMPERIAL cutting compound. It's older and not as good as the newer formulations. 8. Water works as a super lubricant once you get the hard work done and are in the final stages. A mildly hydroplaning pad cuts less than one lubricated with polish. 9. Wax is the opposite of sanding/polishing. It fills voids and thereby creates the final stage of shine, as it yeilds the mirror-finish if you've done everything else right. Meguires (sP?) has a swirl-mark remover - read up on their website - they do a better job than many of packaging their stuff so that it makes sense. 10. run the spinning pad so that it is moving off of edges, and not onto them. pulling the pad over an edge and into it will strip the paint in no time. This lesson normally gets learned the hard way. This is where your buddy's old pickup truck comes in. Learn lessons on vehicles with paint that is not "pride and joy" rated. Good luck. You're aquiring a skill that others will envy if you can get to be any good at it. Kenyon Wills ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm