That may be a bit long of a process to fit into one take but we'll look into it! If you want to know more about the whole process Adam discusses it in this video: ruclips.net/video/nh5lpnZMDOg/видео.html
I just bought my first new car ever and semi kinda already have some swirls. This may be a dumb question but does removing swirls using this technique remove them until I mess up washing the car again? Or does this polishing just mask the swirls for awhile then they'd reveal over time. Again i'm sorry i'm a noob haha just trying to learn and perfect maintaining my car's paint.
So let me get this correct not all the swirls are gunna get removed ?? Even with the best I use rupes and can’t seem to take the swirls out I use rupes blue foam pad with blue cutting compound
You guys should make a video with your scratch and swirl remover and polish 2 step system with your hand hex applicators for the customer who are not ready to get into the machine polishers and customers starting out in the world of detailing
That’s awesome stuff! Can I bring my Range Rover to you guys for Prep and ceramic coating? Sounds like a far fetched dream but thought I should ask. I’m located in Iowa and hand wash my vehicle and use Adams Shampoo for the wash. I have scratches and I would like to fix that and have the vehicle restored and have that ridiculous gloss restored. Please advise, thanks!
I don't have a garage. But Is it safe to use the polisher machine when the sun is out. If so how much faster should I be moving to reduce the heat caused by friction. And what pad would be the best in this case. Thank you!
Hi there. The swirls are not completely gone, right? How would you further proceed in case you wanted it to be perfect or almost perfect? Wetsand it or use even a more aggressive combination pad/compound? Had a similar situation with a very similar result. As I am a perfectionist, I would like to remove them all but I don’t know how. Kind of frustrating...Would be very grateful for tips or hints.
You figure out anything that worked for you? Same situation. I will do a compound/polish but it doesnt seem to be aggressive enought to get out some clear coat scratches from the previous owner.
@@ShaanNotShawn The thing that worked for me: Compound is way too aggressive for swirls. Swirls are very superficial not deep, hence try to go less aggressive. Means a very soft pad and a less aggressive polish, a finishing polish. Try to gain not much heat when polishing, means no pressure and keep the machine not too long on 1 spot. If possible use a DA, if you have only a rotary, it is possible to remove swirls as well but very important is to start with the least aggressive combination that you have available and work your way up...
Firm handshake is what I use for pressure. I have been using Adams products for a long time. I have you would say way too much of your products. I absolutely love the polishers I have them all. I don’t have the micro cordless but have the bigger battery 🔋 polisher. I love that one because I live in an apartment complex. It takes practice to learn to properly correct paint. I used to get panels from the body shop and practice on them. I learned a lot and made many mistakes but now it’s like brushing my teeth. I would like to see the way you maintain a ceramic coating vehicle. I know how but I think 🤔 viewers would like to see. You sell products geared for weekend warriors so I’m sure they Ceramic coated with the spray coating and would like to see how you maintain it. I know I’m writing a big comment it’s better to talk in person.Great video and again I love the brand and what it stands for ✊💎
I have minimal (but noticeable) swirls. Is the compound product still the way to go? Your video showed severe swirling/scratching. Also, how long does ceramic coating last and should it be done by a professional or can it be a DIY?
Good question. I just bought a new 23 GMC AT4 and it’s black. Only had it for a week and took it to wash and hand washed it with brush. Well I was sick to my stomach after I was done. My truck now has swirls all over it and other small scratches in the clear coat. I am now searching for answer to how I can get rid of them and back to what it was. I learned the hard way about going to a car wash. Never again will I do that. Anyway, still hoping to find what will take care of these lights swirls and was wondering the same, will this product do the job? Or is this for deeper and really bad swirls on clear coat?
Great series and fantastic idea! I wish Chris was a little less agressive with the editing as it was difficult to see how fast you were moving the polisher. I would love to see a video on the next step if you wanted to make the paint even more reflective and get rid of the marks that remained after this video.
All in all a good video but with speeding up the camera I couldn't tell the pace of the buffer which is important. Also spend a little time explaining the buffing and polish products and why you selected them. I love your products.
hello, If you are doing the whole car do you compound the whole car in sections and then polish the whole thing in sections? Or do you alternate back and forth?
Hi there, we always recommend doing a small test area first to see which pad and compound/polish combo will work best for each vehicle, but once you have that process down, you may want to compound the whole vehicle in small sections, then move onto polishing afterward. If you compound and polish a fender for example, and then compound the door next to it, you may reintroduce some haze from the compound back into the edges of the fender that you just finished polishing to perfection, so then you may have some re-work to do. Doing all of the compounding first and then all of the polishing second will also save you time and wear-and-tear on your pads since you will not be removing the pads and switching them back and forth at each panel. If you're only working on a few panels each night though, you could compound those, then polish them, and then just make sure to overlap the polishing some when you move onto the next few panels 👍
What pad is best for removing scratches I tried removing a scratch with a Rupes heavy duty microfiber pad but it not working for me to get all the scratches out. Is wool heavy duty pad or a foam orange or yellow pad better to remove scratches out and even the heavier ones because seems to me was making more scratches with this microfiber coarse pad I applied the Malco Super Heavy Duty compound and it seems am making more scratches with this Rupes heavy duty coarse microfiber pad. But am not really good at doing this stuff yet as I was last year when tried to paint my truck and it didn't come out really good.
Nice short but helpful video. What do you do after this? Wax? How often do you recommend doing this if you wash regularly with a two bucket method? Recently bought my first black car, a Porsche Macan S, and it stays clean for five minutes after a wash.
We would recommend waxing, sealing, or coating the vehicle after a good decontamination and correction. Depending on how long your protection method lasts, you can then polish when you start to see swirling again from basic washing. Black is tough to keep clean but a Ceramic Coating would be the easiest way to maintain it!
@@AdamsPolishes Awesome, thanks for the response. I think I am going with Adam's Ceramic Spray Coating after the decon/correction. I am excited to see the results!
Excellent 50/50. I think the first few minutes showing the 50/50 gives you a true idea of how good it can look, but still have minimal scratches left over. You can't always chase every single imperfection. I have a black 2014 Dodge Durango RT, and my black paint came out like that. It took a LOT of restraint for me NOT to chase those small isolated scratches. ONE question I do have is this: As a beginner, how do you know where to start on your test area, by not being too aggressive, yet providing a good cut? I find myself struggling with what pad to use versus stepping up the product.
Love this video, what would be the purpose of owning just the standard blue pad? I would think following your process would work on all cars so where does standard blue foam pad come into play?
I think using the Adam's system that the blue pad is used with the compound. So if the surface of the car is not as trashed as this one so you wouldn't need the microfibre cutting pad, you would use the blue foam pad instead.
Christopher is correct. Some clear coats correct better with Microfiber and others correct better with foam. Microfiber does leave the finish more hazy afterwards but does cut more efficiently majority of the time!
I want to see a product that helps maintain that finish. Once you've done all that work how do you keep it from appearing scratched. I don't want to compound my car every year or 2. Maybe there is a glaze or wax that has fillers in it to mask scratches?
pretty much any ceramic after this will fill in some scratches, add depth, and get you the protection you are looking for. i've yet to use adams ceramic but cmx from mothers is very easy to apply and really does work when directions are followed.
Great 50/50, definable shows how great Adam’s polishes work to remove scratches. Awesome tutorial Joe showing how easy it is. Appreciate the videos you all put out!! Now just gotta stop that with some Adam’s Graphene Advanced Coating 👌🏼
I would really like to see scratch correction on a Fiberglass hull. I've used 3M products before on my black Supra, and the results were pretty good. I am really interested in trying out the Adam's products on it, but, haven't yet pulled the trigger. I assume it's the same process - maybe less pressure? Would love any tips. The rest of the interwebs has some help - but I trust you guys and your products the most - and would love to know how best to use it on Fiberglass.
I'd like to see you guys do a 3/4 ton Ram. I have one and have one hell of a time waxing it. What if you can only do this outdoors, then what kind of techniques can you use?
All you need to do from there is apply a surface prep to wipe any extra polish off. Then, you are ready to apply the Ceramic Coating! The product name for the Compound is just that and you follow it with our Polish! Check out the links in the description in the video as it will take you right to the products!
Hi Wadys, we list all of the products used in this video in the description section of the video. You can find links for each if you click on the "SHOW MORE" in the description. You can use our blue Compound and white Polish and the color-matching 3.5" pads with our Cordless Drill Backing Plate and a cordless drill, but keep in mind that a cordless drill is a mini rotary buffer - you can burn through clear coat or paint with it very easily if it gets too hot, and it can leave rotary holograms in the finish as well, which you would then need to refine with a random orbital polisher like our Swirl Killer Mini 12mm Polisher.
That's a great suggestion! For soft paint, typically you will want to step down on the pad choice, so start with our White Foam Pad and white Polish in a small test area and see what improvement it can do first. If you are not happy with the level of paint correction, move up to the Blue Foam Pad and our blue Compound and re-do the same test area. Keep the machine speed at about 4-5, and keep your arm speed at about 1" per second, a nice slow, even pace, making sure to overlap each pass.
Just blow out the pad right next to the car..so the wax flings into every crevice of the tailgate and lights. Start at 5 with the most aggressive microfiber pad in the middle of the trunk. Leave the spent compound on because that will help you get a nice even finish. Here's the finished product see all these spider webs I still left behind...that's pretty cool🤣🤣
"Speed.............well you'll see how fast to move the polisher by watching me".....................then as soon as he starts, the video goes to fast motion. Is this some kind of joke?
It depends on how dirty the paint is, but if you are careful and use clean towels on a dusty car it is more effective than using a duster which provides do lubrication! Does that help?
I think as a Pro Tip- You should always wipe off before step- 2. You can also use a panel wipe in between steps. This will insure the oils are gone. I feel this is an lazy effort to show us how to paint correct.
I don't understand how that paint got THAT screwed up without purposely doing it for this video. Not like that's an issue, just crazy. Especially since that's a new BMW. My G20 340 came perfect from factory. Good video though!
@@lucasjna08 This could be because you are using too much compound and it is drying out so I would recommend brushing the pad out every time you take it off the paint. You naturally will get some dust but just making sure your pad is cleaned out continuously will help!
I still see scratches on the side the job done. Not as impressed as some other stuff on the market. Adams products or more made for like retail manufactures. Like Walmart or auto zone. Not Professional use! But definitely a lot better than what it was.
i'd like to see the entire video without the fast-forwarding, or a separate video to watch the actual work being done -- fast-forwarded through the part I would like to see most --- the actual usage of the machine!
Would love to see how you guys prep for a ceramic coating : wash ... decon..... and application of coating would be sweet
That may be a bit long of a process to fit into one take but we'll look into it! If you want to know more about the whole process Adam discusses it in this video: ruclips.net/video/nh5lpnZMDOg/видео.html
Three words... wheel well cleaning. Especially carpeted ones 👍
Chevy Silverado?
Volvo XC90 R-Design , BMW'S
Wow ... impressive what you guys are doing. Bring this to the people,
I just bought my first new car ever and semi kinda already have some swirls. This may be a dumb question but does removing swirls using this technique remove them until I mess up washing the car again? Or does this polishing just mask the swirls for awhile then they'd reveal over time.
Again i'm sorry i'm a noob haha just trying to learn and perfect maintaining my car's paint.
Would like to see a one-take on hand compounding / polishing. For those of us who don't have an electric polisher.
So let me get this correct not all the swirls are gunna get removed ?? Even with the best I use rupes and can’t seem to take the swirls out I use rupes blue foam pad with blue cutting compound
You guys should make a video with your scratch and swirl remover and polish 2 step system with your hand hex applicators for the customer who are not ready to get into the machine polishers and customers starting out in the world of detailing
Amazing! Great information. Love your products
Great video ! Is that the 3.5 pad your working with ?
That’s awesome stuff! Can I bring my Range Rover to you guys for Prep and ceramic coating? Sounds like a far fetched dream but thought I should ask. I’m located in Iowa and hand wash my vehicle and use Adams Shampoo for the wash. I have scratches and I would like to fix that and have the vehicle restored and have that ridiculous gloss restored. Please advise, thanks!
I don't have a garage. But Is it safe to use the polisher machine when the sun is out. If so how much faster should I be moving to reduce the heat caused by friction. And what pad would be the best in this case. Thank you!
If you have ceramic coating do you need to use the strip wash soap before paint correction? Or does it not matter
Hi there.
The swirls are not completely gone, right? How would you further proceed in case you wanted it to be perfect or almost perfect? Wetsand it or use even a more aggressive combination pad/compound? Had a similar situation with a very similar result. As I am a perfectionist, I would like to remove them all but I don’t know how. Kind of frustrating...Would be very grateful for tips or hints.
You figure out anything that worked for you? Same situation. I will do a compound/polish but it doesnt seem to be aggressive enought to get out some clear coat scratches from the previous owner.
@@ShaanNotShawn
The thing that worked for me:
Compound is way too aggressive for swirls. Swirls are very superficial not deep, hence try to go less aggressive. Means a very soft pad and a less aggressive polish, a finishing polish. Try to gain not much heat when polishing, means no pressure and keep the machine not too long on 1 spot. If possible use a DA, if you have only a rotary, it is possible to remove swirls as well but very important is to start with the least aggressive combination that you have available and work your way up...
@@frankyteufel11 nice thanks! Will invest in some softer pads and a finisher type polish
Awesome job. Could you tell me what kind of Gloss meter would be perfect to have a good reference of the finish
Firm handshake is what I use for pressure. I have been using Adams products for a long time. I have you would say way too much of your products. I absolutely love the polishers I have them all. I don’t have the micro cordless but have the bigger battery 🔋 polisher. I love that one because I live in an apartment complex. It takes practice to learn to properly correct paint. I used to get panels from the body shop and practice on them. I learned a lot and made many mistakes but now it’s like brushing my teeth. I would like to see the way you maintain a ceramic coating vehicle. I know how but I think 🤔 viewers would like to see. You sell products geared for weekend warriors so I’m sure they Ceramic coated with the spray coating and would like to see how you maintain it. I know I’m writing a big comment it’s better to talk in person.Great video and again I love the brand and what it stands for ✊💎
Glad you've had such success with our products! The cordless polisher is great for apartment complexes. We'll add washing coated vehicles to the list!
Big D does the cordless polisher have good pad spinning power?
Now I like quick process and very good reviews
I just bought the UV CC. It would be good to show the prep and application. Prep using the normal correction vs compound would help and why the diff
I have minimal (but noticeable) swirls. Is the compound product still the way to go? Your video showed severe swirling/scratching. Also, how long does ceramic coating last and should it be done by a professional or can it be a DIY?
Good question. I just bought a new 23 GMC AT4 and it’s black. Only had it for a week and took it to wash and hand washed it with brush. Well I was sick to my stomach after I was done. My truck now has swirls all over it and other small scratches in the clear coat. I am now searching for answer to how I can get rid of them and back to what it was. I learned the hard way about going to a car wash. Never again will I do that. Anyway, still hoping to find what will take care of these lights swirls and was wondering the same, will this product do the job? Or is this for deeper and really bad swirls on clear coat?
Great series and fantastic idea! I wish Chris was a little less agressive with the editing as it was difficult to see how fast you were moving the polisher. I would love to see a video on the next step if you wanted to make the paint even more reflective and get rid of the marks that remained after this video.
All in all a good video but with speeding up the camera I couldn't tell the pace of the buffer which is important. Also spend a little time explaining the buffing and polish products and why you selected them. I love your products.
Do you get that gloss doing exactly like you did in the video sir. I would like that same result
How do you blow out the regular pads without compressed air? Do you just brush them?
Yes, you can brush them but just don't push too hard or brush for too long because you can rip the pad.
hello, If you are doing the whole car do you compound the whole car in sections and then polish the whole thing in sections? Or do you alternate back and forth?
Hi there, we always recommend doing a small test area first to see which pad and compound/polish combo will work best for each vehicle, but once you have that process down, you may want to compound the whole vehicle in small sections, then move onto polishing afterward. If you compound and polish a fender for example, and then compound the door next to it, you may reintroduce some haze from the compound back into the edges of the fender that you just finished polishing to perfection, so then you may have some re-work to do. Doing all of the compounding first and then all of the polishing second will also save you time and wear-and-tear on your pads since you will not be removing the pads and switching them back and forth at each panel.
If you're only working on a few panels each night though, you could compound those, then polish them, and then just make sure to overlap the polishing some when you move onto the next few panels 👍
I just purchased that polisher and two step system loving the results thanks Adam's
Really Helpful!
Great work 👏. I would like to se a really bad white paint and se how you do your magic 🙂👍
What pad is best for removing scratches I tried removing a scratch with a Rupes heavy duty microfiber pad but it not working for me to get all the scratches out. Is wool heavy duty pad or a foam orange or yellow pad better to remove scratches out and even the heavier ones because seems to me was making more scratches with this microfiber coarse pad I applied the Malco Super Heavy Duty compound and it seems am making more scratches with this Rupes heavy duty coarse microfiber pad. But am not really good at doing this stuff yet as I was last year when tried to paint my truck and it didn't come out really good.
Nice short but helpful video. What do you do after this? Wax? How often do you recommend doing this if you wash regularly with a two bucket method? Recently bought my first black car, a Porsche Macan S, and it stays clean for five minutes after a wash.
We would recommend waxing, sealing, or coating the vehicle after a good decontamination and correction. Depending on how long your protection method lasts, you can then polish when you start to see swirling again from basic washing. Black is tough to keep clean but a Ceramic Coating would be the easiest way to maintain it!
@@AdamsPolishes Awesome, thanks for the response. I think I am going with Adam's Ceramic Spray Coating after the decon/correction. I am excited to see the results!
@@jdperalta84 You will love the ease of use and the longevity you get for how easy it is to apply.
Great video. I would love a one take on the UV coating since i bought it at Christmas and will not be able to apply until spring.
Excellent 50/50. I think the first few minutes showing the 50/50 gives you a true idea of how good it can look, but still have minimal scratches left over. You can't always chase every single imperfection. I have a black 2014 Dodge Durango RT, and my black paint came out like that. It took a LOT of restraint for me NOT to chase those small isolated scratches. ONE question I do have is this: As a beginner, how do you know where to start on your test area, by not being too aggressive, yet providing a good cut? I find myself struggling with what pad to use versus stepping up the product.
Do you clean the pads any differently when you’re finished with the car?
We'll tell you all about it in an upcoming One Take Tuesday :)
Love this video, what would be the purpose of owning just the standard blue pad? I would think following your process would work on all cars so where does standard blue foam pad come into play?
I think using the Adam's system that the blue pad is used with the compound. So if the surface of the car is not as trashed as this one so you wouldn't need the microfibre cutting pad, you would use the blue foam pad instead.
Christopher is correct. Some clear coats correct better with Microfiber and others correct better with foam. Microfiber does leave the finish more hazy afterwards but does cut more efficiently majority of the time!
@@AdamsPolishes Thank you! That makes sense
I want to see a product that helps maintain that finish. Once you've done all that work how do you keep it from appearing scratched. I don't want to compound my car every year or 2. Maybe there is a glaze or wax that has fillers in it to mask scratches?
pretty much any ceramic after this will fill in some scratches, add depth, and get you the protection you are looking for. i've yet to use adams ceramic but cmx from mothers is very easy to apply and really does work when directions are followed.
Is there a video explaining what happened to the orange correcting polish?
Do different DA speeds mean different results? i.e. will a lower speed cut faster?
Would love to see, how you can handle rock imprints in plastic bumpers!
What do you recommend for restoring headlights?
Great 50/50, definable shows how great Adam’s polishes work to remove scratches. Awesome tutorial Joe showing how easy it is. Appreciate the videos you all put out!! Now just gotta stop that with some Adam’s Graphene Advanced Coating 👌🏼
I would really like to see scratch correction on a Fiberglass hull. I've used 3M products before on my black Supra, and the results were pretty good. I am really interested in trying out the Adam's products on it, but, haven't yet pulled the trigger. I assume it's the same process - maybe less pressure? Would love any tips. The rest of the interwebs has some help - but I trust you guys and your products the most - and would love to know how best to use it on Fiberglass.
Learner so much in such a short time. Cannot wait for the next one.
That is good to hear! What would you like to see? Turn on post notifications to keep up to date!
@@AdamsPolishes interiors and engine bay please.
@@vectra680 We will put this on the list!
I like this style.. short and sweet👌🏼Trim Coating😀
We agree! Trim coating is on our list 👍🏻
how many hours did it take to do that system to the entire vehicle?
Do you guys toss the pads after one use? Or are they able to be reused?
They can be cleaned and reused! We'll show you how in an upcoming One Take Tuesday
That’s a pretty insane 50/50 🙌
Thanks for the info! I learned a lot.
How to get jean stains out of my white seats would be an awesome episode.
Good suggestion! We'll put it on the list
Use Monthers VLR, and a Melamine sponge. You need a couple per seat.
BestRN use hand sanitizer bro it helps I do it on all my customers car
make friends ride naked (depending on friend)
Suggestion-testing process for longevity of LSP’s but especially the Ceramics!
Do you guys plan on releasing more of your heavy correcting compound?! Been wanting to purchase for awhile now.
We replaced it with our Compound which is way better! Here is the link: adamspolishes.com/products/adam-s-heavy-correcting-compound-8oz
I'd like to see you guys do a 3/4 ton Ram. I have one and have one hell of a time waxing it. What if you can only do this outdoors, then what kind of techniques can you use?
Would there be any additional steps to add ceramic from where you left off? Product name for the polish please?
All you need to do from there is apply a surface prep to wipe any extra polish off. Then, you are ready to apply the Ceramic Coating! The product name for the Compound is just that and you follow it with our Polish! Check out the links in the description in the video as it will take you right to the products!
I’d like to see how and why you make your special(seasonal) items. And that they work just like the other items...aka they’re not just for collecting.
I would like to see a follow up video. After the paint correction then comes protection. I.e. ceramic, spray ceramic, wax, paste wax, etc.
Well done nice work
I noticed you didn’t use the Blue foam pad; what’s the reasoning?
Great products thanks adams
Would this damage the stripes on my car? I have a 45th anniversary carmaro.
Why would it damage the stripes? What would damage them ?
Well I dont understand never say really products name and if we can use pad for drill? Thanks
Hi Wadys, we list all of the products used in this video in the description section of the video. You can find links for each if you click on the "SHOW MORE" in the description. You can use our blue Compound and white Polish and the color-matching 3.5" pads with our Cordless Drill Backing Plate and a cordless drill, but keep in mind that a cordless drill is a mini rotary buffer - you can burn through clear coat or paint with it very easily if it gets too hot, and it can leave rotary holograms in the finish as well, which you would then need to refine with a random orbital polisher like our Swirl Killer Mini 12mm Polisher.
@@AdamsPolishes thanks for your help in weekends start practice with my car again thaks so much
How about soft paint? can u make video for soft paint (remove scratches and swirl mark)
That's a great suggestion! For soft paint, typically you will want to step down on the pad choice, so start with our White Foam Pad and white Polish in a small test area and see what improvement it can do first. If you are not happy with the level of paint correction, move up to the Blue Foam Pad and our blue Compound and re-do the same test area. Keep the machine speed at about 4-5, and keep your arm speed at about 1" per second, a nice slow, even pace, making sure to overlap each pass.
Rv's and gel coats would be a good one please !
How about tree sap removal??
Spray ceramic prep vs liquid ceramic prep
As a Colorado local, I would love to see you guys offer classes on some of this stuff. Would be really awesome
I’d like to see the UV applied.
enjoying the learnings...while hating anyone who'd do that to the ultimate driving machine :-D
Nice
Excelente video me gustaria que pusieran videos de lijado mojado
Just blow out the pad right next to the car..so the wax flings into every crevice of the tailgate and lights. Start at 5 with the most aggressive microfiber pad in the middle of the trunk. Leave the spent compound on because that will help you get a nice even finish. Here's the finished product see all these spider webs I still left behind...that's pretty cool🤣🤣
My thoughts exactly while trying to watch this…
Awesome
one take tuesday on the UV ceramic coating
"Speed.............well you'll see how fast to move the polisher by watching me".....................then as soon as he starts, the video goes to fast motion. Is this some kind of joke?
If you would reduce the RPMS on the polisher , there would be no hazing......your welcome for the PRO tip......
Awesome 💯👍
If I can find a way to always buff my cars like this on the regular no matter what condition the vehicle has been through… I will love detailing
Can we send you photos of our work
Does Waterless Wash scratch the paint?
It depends on how dirty the paint is, but if you are careful and use clean towels on a dusty car it is more effective than using a duster which provides do lubrication! Does that help?
I think as a Pro Tip- You should always wipe off before step- 2. You can also use a panel wipe in between steps. This will insure the oils are gone. I feel this is an lazy effort to show us how to paint correct.
This polisher is very, very smooth with MF pads.
I don't understand how that paint got THAT screwed up without purposely doing it for this video. Not like that's an issue, just crazy. Especially since that's a new BMW. My G20 340 came perfect from factory. Good video though!
Maybe a tire armor episode?
Good idea! We'll add it to the queue for future episodes
How not to create dust?
Hey Lucas, are you referring to how not to create dust with the compound when polishing?
@@AdamsPolishes Yes, please...
@@lucasjna08 This could be because you are using too much compound and it is drying out so I would recommend brushing the pad out every time you take it off the paint. You naturally will get some dust but just making sure your pad is cleaned out continuously will help!
@@AdamsPolishes OK! Many thanks for the reply!!!
Go Buffs.
Show me more video polish and wax to
I still see scratches on the side the job done. Not as impressed as some other stuff on the market. Adams products or more made for like retail manufactures. Like Walmart or auto zone. Not Professional use! But definitely a lot better than what it was.
i'd like to see the entire video without the fast-forwarding, or a separate video to watch the actual work being done -- fast-forwarded through the part I would like to see most --- the actual usage of the machine!
9:46 “That’s what I’m talking about right there” we all had dirty thoughts looking at that and so did he.
uv ceramics
Good idea!
This guy just woke up..
I still see swirl marka
When do class like chemical guys do
It’s still scratched
There are a few scratches left.
Probably washed self service with the gravel filled POLE BRUSH!!
Can still see swirl marks in the “after results”, what a shame!
Bro u talk to much
take a shot every time you hear, Uhhh and ummm...