Hi Candy,
I carry the wax that delta had for the Chem based UV.
Delta have a wax? Never heard of it? Is it actually a wax? Not sure about the Infinity adhering to wax - very doubtful in fact.
Despite cleaning it with prep and scuffing with a green pad - if the lens was still clear before the Infinity, I'd be cautious.
Waxes and polishes just fill scratches instead of removing them like a compound does. While they will look great "filled" there is no strong bond with the wax in the crack and it will lift in time I imagine
The problem at hand is this...
3000 pads will not clear the lens, not crystal clear anyway. So, applying Infinity after a 3000 pad finish will just seal in the grey/fog/milk look that is stopping it being crystal clear. It does bring back a better gloss when applied, but it's not deep and when looked at from an angle, it's almost matt and soaked in.
I personally think the only solutions in this scenario is to 1, add another coat or 2, use an oil based/thicker UV coating.
Fact - Infinity works better if the surface is less porous. Amazingly, Infinity only needs a bit of "keyed" surface to adhere to, very, very little in fact.
...Enter the compound! It works a treat and the Infinity bonds to it perfectly. It makes a 1500 or 3000 finish (if you like them) transform into crystal clear lens if used correctly.
My problem is that I don't want to use two tools and the compound will absolutely not work with an orbital tool of any kind (tried many). I've also tried many, many products that "claim" to work with orbitals, but they just don't.
So I'm stuck with getting perfect results - but the process is too drawn out and tiresome.
My goal is to use the 3" orbital, the sanding discs etc. and then quickly swap the disc for a foam pad and polish them with the same tool and finally apply the Infinity to a clear lens.
I'm working every evening on this and weekends too. I've spent literally $$$'s on various polishes, compounds, chemicals, foam pads, drills, polishers, sanders and then $$$'s more on damaged headlights to test on!
I won't quit.
People say HLR isn't rocket science, which I agree - but my standards keep me striving for a better way to deliver perfect results consistently, speed up the process and cut the cost to the technician.
Onwards and upwards guys!
Pommy