I see that there are so many out there. Is there one that seems to work well, that has variable speeds, that is decent for the do it yourselfer?
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This guy.
https://www.harborfreight.com/7-in-1...her-62297.html
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2004 206 Air Nautique Limited - Black with Vapor Blue (family style)
1997 Masters Edition Nautique - Zephyr Green - gone (amazing ski wake)
1982 Mastercraft Powerslot - gone (a primitive but wonderful beast)
Bellevue WA
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I will second the orbital buffer from Harbor Freight. I paired it with the Meguiars marine/RV restoration system (3 bottles) and it did wonders on my black hull with no swirling. I had some bad oxidation when I bought the boat and doing it by hand was not an option.
I would recommend getting some better polishing/waxing pads however as I bought ones at HF and they fell apart quickly. And a good wool cutting pad if your oxidation is bad. Otherwise just foam pads for the polish and wax.
Last edited by 03SANTE; 03-01-2020, 03:30 PM.
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Originally posted by bturner View Post15 year old 7424 Porter Cable.2004 206 Air Nautique Limited - Black with Vapor Blue (family style)
1997 Masters Edition Nautique - Zephyr Green - gone (amazing ski wake)
1982 Mastercraft Powerslot - gone (a primitive but wonderful beast)
Bellevue WA
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For the most part I've moved away from a rotary wheel and prefer to rely on wet sanding, typically with a series of 1000, 1500 then 2000. Once I have the area blocked out I finish with the 3 step 3M Perfect It products using Yellow, Orange then White foam pads matching the abrasion levels of the Perfect Product. Apply a quality marine past wax like Flagship with a clean White pad and remove with Grey. Turns out exceptional every time.
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Originally posted by bturner View PostFor the most part I've moved away from a rotary wheel and prefer to rely on wet sanding, typically with a series of 1000, 1500 then 2000. Once I have the area blocked out I finish with the 3 step 3M Perfect It products using Yellow, Orange then White foam pads matching the abrasion levels of the Perfect Product. Apply a quality marine past wax like Flagship with a clean White pad and remove with Grey. Turns out exceptional every time.
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I use a collection of Rupes buffers, including a Rotary, Mille, Bigfoot 21, Mini, and Nano. If I had to pick one for the boat it would be the Mille, which is a gear-driven forced orbital. It can do most of the heavy work of a rotary without leaving holograms. If it is really bad, though, you want a rotary with wool pads or even Trizact (3M) wet sanding discs and then some sort of orbital to take the holograms out for the finish work.
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Originally posted by jjackkrash View PostI use a collection of Rupes buffers, including a Rotary, Mille, Bigfoot 21, Mini, and Nano. If I had to pick one for the boat it would be the Mille, which is a gear-driven forced orbital. It can do most of the heavy work of a rotary without leaving holograms. If it is really bad, though, you want a rotary with wool pads or even Trizact (3M) wet sanding discs and then some sort of orbital to take the holograms out for the finish work.
https://www.amazon.com/Detail-LK900E.../dp/B07C66JKZ32004 206 Air Nautique Limited - Black with Vapor Blue (family style)
1997 Masters Edition Nautique - Zephyr Green - gone (amazing ski wake)
1982 Mastercraft Powerslot - gone (a primitive but wonderful beast)
Bellevue WA
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Originally posted by SilentSeven View Post
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Originally posted by jtryon View Post
are you wet sanding by hand?
Also avoid wet sanding without a sanding block or some sort of pad between the paper and your fingers as it's easy to put groves into the surface with your fingers. This is why I refer to this as blocking a lot of times. For most areas I'll wrap my paper in a small rubber block like this....
https://www.amazon.com/3M-Wetordry-R...3235034&sr=8-7
or depending on the area I'm working I'll use a foam pad like one of the ones listed with this items listed with it as frequently purchased items. You can get crazy with this stuff depending on how deep you want to go but based on my experience with boats those three pads should be about all you need for 90% of the sanding you'll do on a boat.
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I'll add my system for reference.
I use a Festool rotary sander (5") for wetsanding. If its bad, I go down to 320 grit then to 600, 1000.
Then I use a Makita 9237C 7" Polisher set to around 2500rpm with a 3M 05711 Blended Wool Compounding pad and 3M 06044 Imperial Compound and Finishing paste
After this, I switch to 3M 05733 Perfect-It Ultrafine Foam Polishing Pad with 3m Perfect-it polish
After this I switch to 3M 05738 perfect it Foam polishing pad with wax.
You need to be careful with the wool pad and a rotary sander but you can't beat the speed and power.
This works wonders for me. I tried getting scratches out before with smaller polishers and not using true wool pads and it took me forever and didn't do a good job. Its expensive to get setup but once you are you will get many polishes and compounds done wiht this setup.
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