How Do You Buff Metallic Acrylic Enamel Paint On Cars?

Perhaps you've repainted your car to mask cosmetic damage or rust, but that new enamel paint isn't sitting right. To fully blend the new paint job with the finish, you will need to buff the metallic acrylic enamel paint on your car. A complete buffing job involves an initial wet sanding, a machine buffing, a wash and a final buffing by hand.

If you buff without wet sanding first, you won't remove all of the imperfections in your metallic enamel paint job. Dip 1500-grit wet sandpaper into a bucket of water. Remove the sandpaper and rub it in long fluid strokes across the body of your car.

Don't jerk the sandpaper or move in circles. As the sandpaper dries out, immerse it in the water again. You don't want the car to dry out, so wet the sandpaper as often as needed to maintain a wet surface.

Work in this manner over the entire area that's received a new coat of acrylic enamel. Rinse the car and dry it with cotton cloths. Apply a quarter-sized amount of rubbing compound to the surface ... more.

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