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Author Topic: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?  (Read 8947 times)

Offline mk5Eire

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Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« on: July 08, 2014, 10:24:18 pm »
While i have seen excellent results from machine polishing, particularly in jays detailing guide, i often ask the question is it really miles apart from doing everything by hand? Albeit by hand is a lot more time consuming and hard work. In terms of removing swirl marks i presume the machine will do a much better job than the hand?

Heres a pic of my passenger side which i done the other day. It was de tared, washed, clayed, washed followed by autoglym super resin polish and sealed with two coats of meguiars carnauba wax. I was quite happy with the shine i got and i did manage to remove a few swirl marks that were on the quarter panel. It was tough work though.



Can people post a few pics of the results they got from machine polishing? And do many on here do it all by hand? Reason im asking is im considering getting a machine polisher myself but im so used to doing cars by hand im kind of stuck in my ways  :signLOL:

Thanks,

Sean.

Offline Deako

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #1 on: July 08, 2014, 11:05:16 pm »
You clearly don't like your fingers.
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Offline GTI-Ross

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #2 on: July 09, 2014, 12:10:53 am »
You can get good results by hand, fact. It just take up to 10 times as long. I can machine polish every panel on my car in 2 hours, and that with 5 passes on each section.

That would probably take you 5 days, and you would have no finger tips left. Machine polishing is so much easier and you have the option to use loads of differnt pads, from heavy compound all the way to light refinement. plus you can use it to apply sealants, glazes and waxes. Win win.
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Offline rich83

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #3 on: July 09, 2014, 12:15:13 am »
Posting pictures is not really that much help. I can wash my car and take photos of it and it will look brilliant, when in fact it need machine polishing.

Offline mk5Eire

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #4 on: July 09, 2014, 08:17:40 am »
Posting pictures is not really that much help. I can wash my car and take photos of it and it will look brilliant, when in fact it need machine polishing.

Because you can't see swirl marks in general photos? I agree


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Offline SurreyED30

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #5 on: July 09, 2014, 09:06:11 am »
I use a machine polisher mate and it tackles swirls/duff patches with ease. I would defo stick your hand in your pocket and buy a machine polisher and save the arthritis for another 20 years  :signLOL:

I've got mine nearly 90% mark free now after 2 goes at a few hours of polishing  :jumpmove:, i thought claying it made it look the dogs nuts but since I bought the DAS6 Pro with Menzerna products and a decent sealant for after the correction is done....i stare at my car every time it rains with one hand down my shorts  :P
« Last Edit: July 09, 2014, 09:08:58 am by SurreyED30 »
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Offline DanMaytee

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #6 on: July 09, 2014, 10:46:52 am »
What you've got to think though mate is using SRP only fills the swirl marks in.  In a month or two time you'll need to do it again as it would of washed out and the exact same swirls would be visible again.  If you tried using a cutting compound such as Menzerna FG400 (which I'm currently using on my machine polisher) it would take you hours and hours just to do a tiny little bit, especially with German paint as it's really tough.  Whereas SRP fills the swirl marks, a cutting compound removes a very fine layer of the top coat thus getting rid of the swirl marks all together.  The only way they would reappear is if the car isn't washed correctly and more swirl marks are caused. 

As you can see using SRP does get you some amazing results by hand and I actually used it before I started machine polishing.  I'd highly recommend getting a DA and giving it a go.  Once you've done it once you shouldn't really need to do it again as long as you give it a safe wash everytime and be careful of contaminates.

As Rich said photos don't mean too much but I thought I'd post these anyway.  All in all it's taken me 5 hours to do that side of the car and the bootlid.  This is doing 4 passes with the cutting compound, 3 passes with a finishing polish and 1 layer of Collinite.   





If you want to know anything else feel free to ask :).  I'm no means a expert but I've learnt quite a few things since starting :)

Offline SurreyED30

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #7 on: July 09, 2014, 11:05:24 am »
im no expert either but this is the results on my black Eddy





havent took any recent shots, these are about 6-8 weeks old  :P
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Offline mk5Eire

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #8 on: July 09, 2014, 01:39:18 pm »
im no expert either but this is the results on my black Eddy





havent took any recent shots, these are about 6-8 weeks old  :P

That bonnet shot  :surprised: Black really is the colour to drool at with a shine lol those are some excellent results! How long did you find the shine to last for after a few washes?

What you've got to think though mate is using SRP only fills the swirl marks in.  In a month or two time you'll need to do it again as it would of washed out and the exact same swirls would be visible again.  If you tried using a cutting compound such as Menzerna FG400 (which I'm currently using on my machine polisher) it would take you hours and hours just to do a tiny little bit, especially with German paint as it's really tough.  Whereas SRP fills the swirl marks, a cutting compound removes a very fine layer of the top coat thus getting rid of the swirl marks all together.  The only way they would reappear is if the car isn't washed correctly and more swirl marks are caused. 

As you can see using SRP does get you some amazing results by hand and I actually used it before I started machine polishing.  I'd highly recommend getting a DA and giving it a go.  Once you've done it once you shouldn't really need to do it again as long as you give it a safe wash everytime and be careful of contaminates.

As Rich said photos don't mean too much but I thought I'd post these anyway.  All in all it's taken me 5 hours to do that side of the car and the bootlid.  This is doing 4 passes with the cutting compound, 3 passes with a finishing polish and 1 layer of Collinite.   





If you want to know anything else feel free to ask :).  I'm no means a expert but I've learnt quite a few things since starting :)

Very good post Dan i actually never realised that the resin polish only filled the swirl marks i had it in my had that it was slightly abrasive and that it removed them. I actually just bought myself a bottle of meguiars ultimate compound and i want to compound the whole car once just to have it done. I did find excellent results with the claybar but there are still a few small scratches which i think compound will erase!

So is compound the only solution to removing swirl marks or can you get a more abrasive polish to remove them?

Would you really need to do 4 passes with cutting compound? Is there any fear of burning through the paint?  :scared:

Offline GTI-Ross

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #9 on: July 09, 2014, 02:05:50 pm »
German paint is so hard, even doing 4 passes on speed 6 DA can leave a few swirl imperfection, often need 5-6. You would find it hard to damage the paint with compound solution unless you are a total buffoon.

SRP does have a small amount of cutting power, combined with filler. Thats why people think its so good, when really its only doing half a job.

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Offline DanMaytee

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #10 on: July 09, 2014, 05:09:01 pm »

Very good post Dan i actually never realised that the resin polish only filled the swirl marks i had it in my had that it was slightly abrasive and that it removed them. I actually just bought myself a bottle of meguiars ultimate compound and i want to compound the whole car once just to have it done. I did find excellent results with the claybar but there are still a few small scratches which i think compound will erase!

So is compound the only solution to removing swirl marks or can you get a more abrasive polish to remove them?

Would you really need to do 4 passes with cutting compound? Is there any fear of burning through the paint?  :scared:

As said German paint is really tough and takes a lot to burn through it.  The 1st time I did my car I gave it 5 passes and this time (the 2nd) I'm giving it 4 and it's all looking good so far.  I've actually seen some really good results with the Meguiars Ultimate Compound by hand at a Meguiars Open Day I went to.  It took some real good elbow grease but they managed to get rid of quite a few swirls.  When you can afford it try getting a DAS6 Pro from Cleanyourcar.co.uk.  Use that with a Orange Hex Logic Pad and you'll see the swirls disappear in no time :)

Offline mk5Eire

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #11 on: July 09, 2014, 05:29:20 pm »
That was actually my next question which pad to get for the polisher! I think if I end up getting one I'll practice on a scrap wing for a day or two and get comfortable with the machine.

Yeah I think I'll go with that compound, it better be good as it's not cheap!




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Offline SurreyED30

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #12 on: July 09, 2014, 06:35:26 pm »



havent took any recent shots, these are about 6-8 weeks old  :P
[/quote]

That bonnet shot  :surprised: Black really is the colour to drool at with a shine lol those are some excellent results! How long did you find the shine to last for after a few washes?

Lasts a good few 3-4 washes mate  to be fair though I really keep on top of it lately, washing her at least once a week and claying every 2 weeks. Washing correctly and not putting swirls in the paint is key
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Offline xjay1337

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #13 on: July 09, 2014, 06:49:08 pm »
There is a HUGE difference between hand and machine polishing.

I wouldn't bother hand polishing, glazing by hand is fine but hand polishing, you simply cannot get an even coverage of pressure, effort and product. Machines work far faster and they are consistent so you can get a consistent result. I have seen horrible hazes from hand polishing especially if you're using polishes which have a long work time and take a long time to break down into their finer "finishing" particulate sizes.

A light source shows a million things... this is not a dig at anyone in particular, I'm just purely trying to educate people. you need a fixed light source on a panel in a position to highlight swirls, scratches etc. A side on shot shows nothing especially on a black car... LITERALLY none the wiser - amazing what a light source shows...

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« Last Edit: July 30, 2014, 01:14:57 pm by xjay1337 »

Offline Scottymon

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Re: Polish by hand vs machine, miles apart?
« Reply #14 on: July 09, 2014, 08:22:53 pm »
Amzing the difference there, I defo need to get a DA polisher, keep putting it off.