I've been working on polishing bare covers and it works out pretty good, for the most part. I don't have a fancy setup for this - just a corded power drill and a buffing wheel with Mibro 6 high gloss polishing compound.
Mibro High-Gloss Cleaning Compound, Model# 698091 | Polishing Kits | Northern Tool + Equipment
The picture below shows bare, lightly polished, heavily polished covers from left to right. My question here regards the streaks/marks on the highly polished pickup as seen in the upper portion of that cover in the picture. I try not to load too much material on the wheel, and I scrape it between loads. Seems inevitable though that some compound will "stick" to the cover during polishing, which can cause the marks (not the scratch near the right edge/center, but the whitish streaky looking marks). I've found that removing the compound with 90% Isopropyl helps to minimize this "scarring". In fact, the marks that show up in the picture weren't really noticeable to the naked eye without just the right angle of light.
Anyway, just wondering if anyone has any advice for avoiding such markings when polishing bare covers. And for removing the excess compound in general (doesn't respond well to soap/water, better to alcohol)
Different compound?
Lighter pressure?
Special wheel/tools?
Personally, I don't care if they're perfect or not. One good playing session and they're scratched anyway. I'm not a customer though. Another way to put it might be how do you get a high gloss finish with minimal scratch/swirl marks or this sort of thing where the compound sticks and leaves marks.
Mibro High-Gloss Cleaning Compound, Model# 698091 | Polishing Kits | Northern Tool + Equipment
The picture below shows bare, lightly polished, heavily polished covers from left to right. My question here regards the streaks/marks on the highly polished pickup as seen in the upper portion of that cover in the picture. I try not to load too much material on the wheel, and I scrape it between loads. Seems inevitable though that some compound will "stick" to the cover during polishing, which can cause the marks (not the scratch near the right edge/center, but the whitish streaky looking marks). I've found that removing the compound with 90% Isopropyl helps to minimize this "scarring". In fact, the marks that show up in the picture weren't really noticeable to the naked eye without just the right angle of light.
Anyway, just wondering if anyone has any advice for avoiding such markings when polishing bare covers. And for removing the excess compound in general (doesn't respond well to soap/water, better to alcohol)
Different compound?
Lighter pressure?
Special wheel/tools?
Personally, I don't care if they're perfect or not. One good playing session and they're scratched anyway. I'm not a customer though. Another way to put it might be how do you get a high gloss finish with minimal scratch/swirl marks or this sort of thing where the compound sticks and leaves marks.
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