How to Choose the Right Compound or Polish


We get a lot of questions about selecting the “right” machine, polishing pad, and polishing compound. People always ask what works best for black paint, for red paint; for hard paint, for soft paint; for domestic cars, for import cars, etc. You can make just about any paint finish shine on any vehicle if you select the best combination of polishing machine, buffing pad, and polishing compound for that particular car. Every car and every paint job is different, though: How much paint did the manufacturer spray on? What paint brand and formula did they use? What type of paint is it: petroleum-based or water-based? Was it waxed and cared for, or was it neglected for years and destroyed by the elements? How humid was it the day they painted that run of cars? Was the car in an accident and was it repainted with completely different paint? These are the questions you need to consider as you start polishing a car.

V32 Optical Grade Extreme Compound

V32 Optical Grade Extreme Compound

Chemical Guys V32 Optical Grade Extreme Compound is the first extreme compound designed to eliminate heavy paint defects and imperfections from super-hard paint finishes.

V32 is formulated for fast cutting with optical grade micro abrasives that restore both old paint finishes, and freshly-painted panels.

The advanced compound cuts through heavy paint defects, swirls, scratches, and oxidation, and sets up paint for superior final polishing results.

V34 Optical Grade Hybrid Compound

V34 Optical Grade Hybrid Compound

Chemical Guys V34 Optical Grade Hybrid Compound is the mid-grade compound that eliminates light to moderate paint defects and imperfections from super hard paints, then finishes like a fine polish.

V34 is formulated for fast cutting with optical grade diminishing abrasives that restore old paint finishes and freshly-painted panels.

V36 Optical Grade Cutting Polish

V36 Optical Grade Cutting Polish

Chemical Guys V36 Optical Grade Cutting Polish is formulated for fast cutting with optical grade diminishing abrasives that restore both old paint finishes and freshly-painted panels. The advanced polish cuts through light to moderate paint defects, swirls, scratches, and oxidation, then finishes with superior luster fit for final polish results on most paints.

V38 Optical Grade Final Polish

V38 Optical Grade Final Polish

When only perfection will do at the end of a polishing detail, detailers reach for Chemical Guys V38 Optical Grade Final Polish to refine depth, luster, and gloss. V38 refines compound and polishing marks from prior steps, and enhances reflection, shine, and gloss on any paint finish. V38 works on conventional clear coat, ceramic clear coat, and single stage paint finishes.

How to Use the Polish

So there is no cookie-cutter answer that will work for every car out there. What there is, though, is a method. We have a method for selecting the best combination of machine, pad, and polishing compound for any car we may detail.

The method we use in the Chemical Guys Detail Garage is as follows:

Step 1: Polish a Test Spot

We start by polishing one small spot on the car. We use this spot to find out what combination works best for removing scratches and restoring glossy shine on the paintwork. Once we determine what combination works best for this paint job, we repeat this process over the rest of the car

Step 2: Use the Gentlest Method that Produces the Best Results

Start with the least-aggressive combination of Machine, Pad, and Polish that gets us the results we want. We can always remove more paint if the prior step did not remove all the scratches, but we can never undo the paint that we removed. Paint doesn’t grow back, so always start on the gentle side and get more aggressive as need be.

  • Polishing Machine: Start with Dual Action over Rotary

    • Dual action polishers spread out their energy over a larger area because the buffing pad orbits as it spins.
    • This orbit moves over a bigger circle than a pinpoint rotation of a rotary polisher, so there is less energy and heat put into any given place as the machine works.
  • Buffing Pads: Start with Orange Hex-Logic Pad

    • Of the 7 Hex-Logic Polisher Pads, 2 are “cutting” pads that remove a lot of paint at a time: Yellow and Orange.
    • We pick the Orange Medium Cutting Pad because it is less aggressive than the Yellow Heavy Cutting Pad.
  • Polishing Compound: Make your first pass with V36 Cutting Polish

    • We choose V36 Cutting Polish because it has lighter abrasives than a heavier compound like V32 or V34.
    • V36 cuts away swirls, and refines glossy shine, but does not cut out deep scratches or oxidation like a compound.

Step 3: Check Your Work; Make Adjustments

After finishing your first pass with V36 on an Orange Hex Logic Pad with a Dual Action Polisher, check your results for satisfactory scratch removal. Shine a halogen light on the paint and look at all angles to see if the scratches and swirls are gone or reduced. For the most scrutiny, pull the car outside and look at the test spot in direct sunlight. Compare it with the untouched paint and see if your results are satisfactory.

If you are satisfied with the amount of swirls and scratches removed, go on to the next refinement step: White Soft Polishing Hex Logic Pad with V38 Final Polish. Check for enhanced gloss and depth with this step. If there’s no discernable difference between the finish of V36 and V38, skip it.

If you are not satisfied with the amount of swirls and scratches removed, start changing variables and get slightly more aggressive until the scratches and swirls are gone:

  • First try using a harder compound:

    • Try V34 Hybrid Compound with the same DA machine and Orange Cutting Pad.
  • If that didn’t work, try using a harder cutting pad:

    • Switch from Orange to Yellow Cutting Pad, or try a Microfiber Cutting Pad.
  • If all else fails, switch to a rotary polisher:

    • Start the test spot with a new combination:

      • Rotary Polisher, Orange Cutting Pad, and V36 Cutting Polish.
      • Analyze results as you go and make adjustments as needed.

Remember

Just remember one truth as you polish: You will not remove 100% of defects. It’s just not possible.

Some scratches are just too deep for machine polishing to fix. You would have to wet-sand and polish all the paint off the car to get the scratches out. There comes a point where if you want perfect paint again, you simply have to repaint the car. And even then, it’ll be full of defects, runs, and holograms from the body shop polishing the car with a wool pad on a rotary polisher.

Embrace the limitations of paint technology and polishing methods: accept that you can get paintwork to look as good as it possibly can without simply starting over with a new paint job.

Final Note

Remember, this was a guide for the methodology of choosing the best combination of machine, pad, and compound for any particular polishing job. It is not a writeup on proper machine polisher technique, the prep work you have to complete before you start polishing, or the protection steps you need to take after you finishing polishing. You can cause permanent damage to your painted finish if you do not use proper polishing technique, if you do not choose a good combination to work with, or if you do not do thorough prep work before you start polishing.

For more information on polishing prep work, using a machine polisher with good polishing technique and combination of machine/pad/chemical, watch the Polishing How-To videos on the Chemical Guys YouTube channel. Or better yet, sign up for a Polishing DIY Class with Chemical Guys Smart Detail University for hands-on training.

Back to Exterior How-To's

Shop the Products