So, I’ve got a customer that I will be working for in a couple weeks doing a complete wet-sand, compound and polish on his freshly painted truck (will actually be close to three months by the time I get my hands on it). I am very new to wet-sanding (customer knows this and said he was fine if I used his truck as a "guinea pig") as I have just done some defect removal on minor areas and some headlight restoration via damp sanding. I’ve done a couple little test spots via true wet-sanding by hand, but nothing major.
The Truck: 1987 Silver Toyota Pickup The owner completely stripped the old paint, put two layers of primer, a layer of base coat, and a pretty thick (his words) layer of clear on the truck. After talking with me about a month ago, he decided he was going to do the wet-sanding and polishing himself so he did the hood and passenger front fender with 1000 grit, then 2000 grit, then polished it up. He also started doing some other rough sanding on the tailgate and passenger side with 1000 grit, but then threw in the towel and decided to hire me.
My Plan: I want to be as ready as possible for this job in a couple weeks and thought I’d see if anyone had any thoughts, advice, or tips that they could share. This will be a huge learning experience for me (and the amount I’m charging him is evidence of this, but I’m just chalking it up as R&D)
and I want to try and learn as much as possible through the entire process leading up to it, and the two or three days of sanding, compounding, and polishing that it will take.
My first and biggest question is to make sure that I have everything I need and that there isn’t anything that I’m forgetting or overlooking. Also, since I’ve never done this much wet-sanding before, it’s tough for me to gauge how many sanding discs and everything that I will need/go through.
What I’ve got so far:
3” backing plates S3BP and the W63 which I have an adapter to use with the DA
3” foam interface pad
3” 1000, 1500, and 3000 grit Meguiars sanding discs
6” backing plate S6BP
6” foam interface pad
6” 1500 and 3000 grit Meguiars sanding discs.
I've also got all the compounding and polishing stuff that I'll need.
I know I’ll probably need a sanding block maybe the 3” circular hand pad and some actual Unigrit sandpaper, but I wasn’t sure if I really needed anything coarser than 1000 grit, and how many levels I should plan on doing (like 1000 to 1500 to 3000?)
Thanks for taking some time read this and share any thoughts or suggestions that you might have.
Here are some pictures of the truck, lighting was horrible and I'm used to capturing swirls not roughness in the clear, but these are the best I got:
Hood after his sanding and polishing (the paint looked decently flat, but there are a ton of swirls that will need some M105 for sure and possibly some more wetsanding)

He started doing some sanding on this passenger side panel:


And this is what the majority of the truck looks like, (and what everything else was like when he finished spraying the clear)


Tried some different lighting on these last two to help show the texture of the clear on the front drivers side fender


Thanks in advance for any help or tips that anyone has.
The Truck: 1987 Silver Toyota Pickup The owner completely stripped the old paint, put two layers of primer, a layer of base coat, and a pretty thick (his words) layer of clear on the truck. After talking with me about a month ago, he decided he was going to do the wet-sanding and polishing himself so he did the hood and passenger front fender with 1000 grit, then 2000 grit, then polished it up. He also started doing some other rough sanding on the tailgate and passenger side with 1000 grit, but then threw in the towel and decided to hire me.
My Plan: I want to be as ready as possible for this job in a couple weeks and thought I’d see if anyone had any thoughts, advice, or tips that they could share. This will be a huge learning experience for me (and the amount I’m charging him is evidence of this, but I’m just chalking it up as R&D)

My first and biggest question is to make sure that I have everything I need and that there isn’t anything that I’m forgetting or overlooking. Also, since I’ve never done this much wet-sanding before, it’s tough for me to gauge how many sanding discs and everything that I will need/go through.
What I’ve got so far:
3” backing plates S3BP and the W63 which I have an adapter to use with the DA
3” foam interface pad
3” 1000, 1500, and 3000 grit Meguiars sanding discs
6” backing plate S6BP
6” foam interface pad
6” 1500 and 3000 grit Meguiars sanding discs.
I've also got all the compounding and polishing stuff that I'll need.
I know I’ll probably need a sanding block maybe the 3” circular hand pad and some actual Unigrit sandpaper, but I wasn’t sure if I really needed anything coarser than 1000 grit, and how many levels I should plan on doing (like 1000 to 1500 to 3000?)
Thanks for taking some time read this and share any thoughts or suggestions that you might have.
Here are some pictures of the truck, lighting was horrible and I'm used to capturing swirls not roughness in the clear, but these are the best I got:
Hood after his sanding and polishing (the paint looked decently flat, but there are a ton of swirls that will need some M105 for sure and possibly some more wetsanding)
He started doing some sanding on this passenger side panel:
And this is what the majority of the truck looks like, (and what everything else was like when he finished spraying the clear)
Tried some different lighting on these last two to help show the texture of the clear on the front drivers side fender
Thanks in advance for any help or tips that anyone has.

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