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Originally Posted by mkh This is something that i have just not been able to figure out - i see hairline scratches, lines on the surface which are impossible to see with a normal vision but against the light that falls on the surface putting your eye at the level of the surface, one can see. Now i know that a few were there when i got my new car and saw them the very first day itself, but i have no idea how to get them off. I think the only way is to have a proper polish- which will need a Rotary buffer. In my earlier car, there were many of these and even after the 3M treatment, they got hidden, but not completely gone.
Has anyone faced this and done away with them?Swirls are easy to see and can be removed, not sure why these come and how can we get rid of them.
I have been using california duster and micro vv carefully, can we get them when wax application?
Another question- how do you ensure a re-usable wax applicator? I have a foam applicator, and a micro applicator, but its a c tough task to get the wax out of them and re-use. I hope that am not introducing these lines due to the applicator not being proper enough!
This is THE only thing that still bugs me - still unable to figure out about these lines that remain! |
I too had observed like super fine hairline scratches but about 3-4mm in length when I look at the paint from real close under a street light!
(under a microscope they looked like a really tiny shallow 'flood channel' like thing)
under normal lighting they aren't visible at all! I think If they had come from waxing, then they should've been circular of along the direction of the applicator pad.
I use totally clean MF cloth but I think microscopic dust particles can possibly cause this. Its these lines when they increase in number constitute a swirl!
(so it can be said that they are the starting of a swirl formation)
and swirls only appear as circular! ideally they are multiple lines in haphazard direction but the sharp angles that they reflect light at leads us to believe that they are circular(if the light used to view the defect is circular)
Something that I observed while waxing is that if you wax in non controlled environment(basically, an open area), dust tends to settle down on the not-yet waxed parts of the panel you're working on!
and after waxing 2-3 panels, I can see very minor dust collection on the periphery of the sponge applicator pad!(this was even though I was dusting off the panel repeatedly before working on that particular part)
I think, this might too be responsible for the hairline scratches!
I now want to work under controlled conditions(kind of like a clean room) and see whether the results turn out to be dramatic as opposed to waxing/working in the open!
I use a liquid detergent for my applicator pads and always handwash it myself! Collinite was a pain to take off of the sponge applicator!
but otherwise, a liquid detergent and handwash works perfectly for the applicator pads! (I feel machine wash might damage them)
and dry in the sunlight(not outside, as there's loads of dust in the air outside and it might lead to pad contamination etc.)
now my mom thinks I'm crazy! lol
