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Looks great... I looked at the photos in the gallery and didn't realize there was a write up... looks great and looks like fun!
I like Jbirk's idea of comparing today's products. Although not totally fair as the products you used are old and may not be working at their fullest but still an interesting idea.
I have had that hood laying around for years. My plan is to strip it and custom flame it and hang it on the wall.
Being that it has been around my garage for so long it has alot of overspray from various projects and would be a major amount of work to polish out completely.
kerosene would have given the corn starch more rubbing time without drying out so fast. I had some and would use it if I had a whole car to do but the part I was polishing out looked OK without it.
Neat little machine. It is roughly the size of a G100/PC.
I had to put a new cord on it and a disassembled the switch to clean the connections. I works like a charm and is VERY easy to use. I really enjoyed polishing with it.
The threads on it will not take buff pads and backing plates that are common now but I am sure an adapter can be found.
A few more passes with corn starch would have cleaned the finish a little better as I pulled a little bit of the green from the finish when I waxed it but not too bad.
I started with a mixture of corn starch and water. It was a weird mix. I adjusted the ratio and came up with just about right mix to get a watery paste on the hood. The polisher runs at about 1000rpm (my guess) and is very easy to use.
The corn starch mix would dry quickly while being buffed and would powder up something feirce but it worked!!!
I followed that with a few applications of #7. I used a soft cotton towel to apply and remove the product.
That was followed with the old paste wax. It was the first time I opened the can and the product looked and worked fine.
I put on one coat followed by a second once that first coat was removed.
I decided to polish out a part of an old school hood that was painted in laquer in the early 60s. I would have polished the entire hood but about half had undercoating overspray on it.
I bought a polisher that I guess was made in the 50s. A wool pad with a leather backing was tied (yep, tied) to a rubber backing plate.
My plan of attack included using a mixture of corn starch and water to deep clean the paint, (I have heard for years thats how it was done in the "good ol' days") -- a couple of applications of classic (might be from the 50s also) mirrior glaze #7 out of an original glass bottle and a coat of mirrior glaze wax dated to be from about the 60s (I think)
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