Re: The Swirl Mistery
Hey Mike & Mike,
I picked up #7 on the way home last night and can't wait for Saturday so that I can see the magic happen. After I wash, clay and apply #7 how often should I reapply #7 to hide the swirls on my GTI that is parked outside 7x24. Also can I apply NXT over the top of #7 of make it last until I can polish out the entire car in the spring?
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The Swirl Mistery
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by Mike-in-Orange View Post#And, uh, just how did you modify the lawnmower?
Now regarding the lawnmower lets just say that "Tim the Tool Man" would not be even a close second, it wasn't pretty. MORE POWER ! ! ! !
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
#7 by hand, not a problem. Here's how I was taught at a Meguiar's Wednesday Night Open Garage (although there are other ways to apply/remove):
Using a foam applicator pad begin gently working #7 onto/into the paint, covering the usual 2' x 2' section. It will go on very oily at first, but as soon as you feel it start to drag against the paint stop working it. Now gently wipe over the area with a clean microfiber towel, but don't worry about removing all the excess on the first pass, just sort of break it up. Now go over the area again with the MF towel until you've removed all the excess. The area where you've applied it should look richer and glossier than the surrounding areas. Continue this process around the entire vehicle and you're done.
Since #7 is a polish you do not let it dry or haze. Since it's a pure polish it has no cleaning abilities so you don't need to work it vigorously and therefore it's quite an easy process.
And, uh, just how did you modify the lawnmower?
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Now if I can apply #7 by hand I'll be set because my boss doesn't let me your power tools after I modified the lawn mower
Mike and Mike , thank you
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by STG View PostSo, what would you define as a hologram? I always thought holograms looked like the first two pictures.
IMHO anything group of parallel scratches in the form or arcs, spirals, whirls or curls should be called a swirl no matter what caused it.
The word hologram has been hijacked. It already has meaning, basically a 3-dimensional visual image. There are swirls that have the apparent characteristic of 3-dimensioanality. They appear to float above or below the paint surface and move around as you change your viewing angle. I would say that these kinds of swirls should be called holograms (similarly, regardless of how they were formed.)
So by my definitions holograms are a special case of swirls. All (paint defect) holograms would be swirls but not all swirls are holograms.
You're right that the swirls in the pix look like they’re probably holograms but it’s impossible to tell from the 2-D images.
PC.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by cv_soccer View PostWhat glaze would you recommend, and please don't say mothers
Originally posted by cv_soccer View PostI may be tripping over word definitions, but doesnt the act of polishing remove some of the material that you are polishing? If I’m off base please let me know because I was planning to apply a glaze to hide things and then in the spring polish everything out.
Your plan to apply a glaze to hide things temporarily and then polish in the spring makes a lot of sense. The glaze will help the finish look good, temporarily, until the weather is more cooperative and you can actually polish out the offending marks, whether those be cobwebs, holograms, swirls, what have you.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by Mike Phillips View PostThe answer to the above question is no as long as you're using Meguiar's polishes, whether they be one of our cleaner/polishes or our pure polishes. The answer is maybe depending upon what's inside some other company's polish because some company's call their abrasive compounds polishes.
As always you are a fountain of information, thank you.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by cv_soccer View PostRather then polish, polish, and polish every time I get swirl marks in my red MkV is applying a 'glaze' making the issue worse, or is it just delaying the polishing?
Originally posted by cv_soccer View PostWhat glaze would you recommend, and please don't say mothers
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by Mike-in-Orange View PostThere are many products that will fill in and essentially hide swirls. It's actually quite common for a high volume body shop to leave a lot of buffer holograms behind and then cover them up with a glaze of some sort. The car will look fantastic when the owner picks it up, but after a few washes (even perfect washes that instill no new swirls) the glaze washes away and the swirls are revealed.
To actually "fix" swirls, you need to actually remove some of the surrounding paint, or clear coat. This sounds sort of scary, but for the most part swirls are such fine, minute little scratches that you remove hardly any clear to eliminate them. I also think that part of what makes a swirl so noticeable in harsh light is that they have very sharp edges on them, and polishing sort of softens over those edges so they aren't as visible. Couple that with the actual removal of surrounding material and the swirls are gone.
What glaze would you recommend, and please don't say mothers
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
So, what would you define as a hologram? I always thought holograms looked like the first two pictures.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
I think one source of confusion is that the terminology isn't "officially" defined anywhere. There seems to a certain amount of common usage but I think there are also differences in usage as well.
I would call a swirl a grouping of parallel microscopic scratches that appear as a distinct pattern of arcs, streaks or, well, swirls.
These are swirls:
Cobweb scratches a.k.a. spider web scratches, cobweb effect, cobwebbing or spiderwebbing is not actually a pattern of scratches. It's a visual effect, or rather an illumination effect. It's a pattern that appears when randomly distributed scratches are illuminated in a certain way. You can tell it's an illumination effect because the pattern "follows" the image of the illumination source.
These are spider web scratches:
PC.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by Mike-in-Orange View PostI don't believe they are actually always quite as circular as they appear under harsh lighting conditions. Have you ever shone a light onto your paint to reveal those swirls, then slowly moved the light? The concentric ring of swirls remains centered on the light. Because of this I believe it's more a trick of the light that makes us think swirls always are truly circular. Sure, they are curved, and I'm also quite certain that some will follow others, but for the most part I believe them to be small, short, very shallow scratches that actually run in all different directions.
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
I've always wondered about the circular pattern of swirls. I've had several people ask me and I have no way of explaining it to them. Someone please explain this!!
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Re: The Swirl Mistery
Originally posted by bronxon View PostCan someone explain me how the swirls marks are created? (always in circles)
Originally posted by TommyC View PostIs there a difference between covering up swirls and actually fixing swirls?
Such as, can a layer of wax cover up swirls? Or will swirls show through wax? Is there anything to be wary of that a body shop could just put on the paint to hide the swirls instead of fixing them?
To actually "fix" swirls, you need to actually remove some of the surrounding paint, or clear coat. This sounds sort of scary, but for the most part swirls are such fine, minute little scratches that you remove hardly any clear to eliminate them. I also think that part of what makes a swirl so noticeable in harsh light is that they have very sharp edges on them, and polishing sort of softens over those edges so they aren't as visible. Couple that with the actual removal of surrounding material and the swirls are gone.
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