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Personally, when using a dual-action/random orbital, I like the speed set low enough that it doesn't sling material. By controlling downward pressure, you can influence cut rate. Running things at higher speeds, or too much downward pressure, can also input more heat into things, which can be problematic if things get too hot. In my case, I managed this heat by re-misting with water from a spray bottle a few times. I have a set of diamond polishing pads for polishing stone/granite countertops, that are designed to use with rotary polishers, and ideally, flooded with a constant flow of water, as both a coolant and to keep freshly removed grit removed. While it would be an interesting experiment to try using them to polish automotive glass, and I'd be fairly confident they could break through at least some of those "pocks", I'd be very fearful that attempting this may result in uneven material removal (more likely the more aggressive you get with removal). You could easily make things worse (inducing optical distortions/aberration) than just leaving the small pits! Not to mention the time and effort required compared to the alternative of replacing the windshield. You might look into some sort of windshield chip-filling resin might be workable to fill your pock marks, but I can't say whether it'd be worth the effort or not. Typically the chip-filling resin is done one chip at a time, and is UV-cured. The excess resin can be mostly shaved off flat with a razor blade afterward. |
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I know exactly the specs you are referring to... here are some views through the polished side of my ~116k mile Boxster windshield, where they are clearly visible. First photo is an overall view looking into bright, glaring sunlight, and second is a zoomed-in view looking into an overhead light in an underground parking garage:
http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1485240901.jpg http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1485240930.jpg That said, it looks better than before polishing. Below, notice those same two scenes viewed through the unpolished side of my Boxster's windshield... http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1485241132.jpg http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1485241151.jpg These wiper blade scratch marks make really annoying, moving rows of glaring parallel-line reflections which constantly change orientation as the bright moving lights outside the car (especially worse at night) move around. The worst spot in the windshield for me is the area where both of the wipers overlap, as there are glaring lines there at not just one, but two unique angles! |
On another site I read about using BAR KEEPERS FRIEND to polish glass, and for me it worked great. I mixed some into a paste and rubbed it on the glass (unfortunately by hand). Took some elbow grease but it did a great job..... I recommend it! Just be careful to keep it off the paint and rubber surfaces.
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Been reading quite a bit here.
Is it fair to say that this requires a great deal of effort? Trying to find out if it would be just easier if not more effective to get the glass changed by the dealer here. Not cheaper unfortunately, they charge US$2k here hence why I am so interested into this thread. Anyone managed to get most of the little rock-hits off? I'm looking for a better night vision and those rock marks is what ruins it all in my case. Any tips you have, please chime. Jakeru mentioned resin filling, if anyone knows about any/tech available do add thx |
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I suspect it's done it for you other folks who have polished, but just not to a severe enough degree that it's been noticeable to you guys. If I polished my whole window so I didn't have two adjacent alternatives (unpolished vs polished) to compare, I may have not noticed it too. It's a bit subtle, to the point it would even be challenging to capture with a photo. But if you want to look for the degree of distortion through the windshield, the best way to notice it is to find a perfectly straight feature on the other side of the glass (like straight edge of a highway median), look at it through manually polished vs unpolished surfaces. Through unpolished, oe Porsche glass, (very good quality in terms of being distortion-free, by the way, especially considering its varying curves) the straight feature appears, well, straight; but through the manually polished surface, well, I'm noticing that same feature gets a bit "wavy" on mine. Most noticeable when your face isn't right up close to the glass, in fact, it might be easiest to observe from the outside of the car, looking all the way through it glass canopy to the other side. As the cause of this is basically uneven material removal across the optical surfaces, I do wonder if using an interface pad between the relatively thin/stiff rayon polishing pad and the backing plate, and perhaps using less pressure may have allowed a bit more even material removal. |
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