Mr.Kiss
Well-known member
I was at Canadian Tire a couple of weeks ago, and i saw a Simoniz 6" 12V cordless buffer on sale for 40 bucks ... common sense told me to stay away from it, but for the money i could not turn it down. Well the stupid 12V ni-cad batteries would last 5 min and take 7 hours to charge and about the 4th time i charged the batteries, they went for shit and would not take a charge .... If you had a scratch in the paint it would take forever to polish it out ... so The tool was pretty much a waste of 40 bucks.:suicide:
I was a Home depot the other day and noticed that Ryobi batteries had the same connections as my cordless buffer batteries ... so i bought a Ryobi 18V lithium battery and a charger and headed home to hot rod my buffer ... the Ryobi battery fit right in and i just made a wire hook to keep the battery from falling out of the buffer .... i let it run for about 20 minutes and it never even got warm, but the rpm was alot faster ... i was getting pretty excited about my new tool ... but i was scared it spun to fast and would burn the paint.:stirpot:
I work for a cable company and i have a older van that the paint is shitty on, so i took it home and fired up the 18V cordless buffer to see what would happen ... well in about 40 min i had a cable van the shines better than the new ones we have ... and gave the nieghbors a good laugh and left my boss scratching his head.
So for the big test ... the paint on my Escalade is black and has swirl marks really bad in it. So i took some mothers scratch remover and my buffer and in an hour i had my caddy looking better than new and the battery had not run out in my buffer .... All i had to do was put some scratch remover on the buffing pad and let it float around on the vehicle and it turned out far better than i ever got from paying the detail shops to power polish it.
So for anybody looking for a small buffer consider this .... it is now an awsome tool for fixing paint and never blew up after an hour straight of buffing swirl marks out of my caddy.:yahoo:

If i were to do it again i would just buy the ryobi 18V ni-cad batteries instead of 2 Lithium batteries ... my lithium batteries last an hour and charge in 45 min so i can go steady but i think with 3 nicad batteries you could go steady to and the nicads are only $45 as compaired to $110 for the big lithium ones.
So anyone looking for a small 6" buffer consider this ... It works awsome and the 6" buffer can get into all the hard places and it takes no elbow grease to polish the car now. I now longer feel ripped off, instead i am feeling pretty smart
... i guess until it blows up
... but so far so good ...
I was a Home depot the other day and noticed that Ryobi batteries had the same connections as my cordless buffer batteries ... so i bought a Ryobi 18V lithium battery and a charger and headed home to hot rod my buffer ... the Ryobi battery fit right in and i just made a wire hook to keep the battery from falling out of the buffer .... i let it run for about 20 minutes and it never even got warm, but the rpm was alot faster ... i was getting pretty excited about my new tool ... but i was scared it spun to fast and would burn the paint.:stirpot:
I work for a cable company and i have a older van that the paint is shitty on, so i took it home and fired up the 18V cordless buffer to see what would happen ... well in about 40 min i had a cable van the shines better than the new ones we have ... and gave the nieghbors a good laugh and left my boss scratching his head.
So for the big test ... the paint on my Escalade is black and has swirl marks really bad in it. So i took some mothers scratch remover and my buffer and in an hour i had my caddy looking better than new and the battery had not run out in my buffer .... All i had to do was put some scratch remover on the buffing pad and let it float around on the vehicle and it turned out far better than i ever got from paying the detail shops to power polish it.
So for anybody looking for a small buffer consider this .... it is now an awsome tool for fixing paint and never blew up after an hour straight of buffing swirl marks out of my caddy.:yahoo:

If i were to do it again i would just buy the ryobi 18V ni-cad batteries instead of 2 Lithium batteries ... my lithium batteries last an hour and charge in 45 min so i can go steady but i think with 3 nicad batteries you could go steady to and the nicads are only $45 as compaired to $110 for the big lithium ones.
So anyone looking for a small 6" buffer consider this ... It works awsome and the 6" buffer can get into all the hard places and it takes no elbow grease to polish the car now. I now longer feel ripped off, instead i am feeling pretty smart

