I am an A&P and bought a micro mesh kit using power tools. I know from personal experience that micro mesh by hand requires patience and hours and hours of rubbing for very little results.
This kit removes minor scratches and scuffs. Restores up to 100 square feet of acrylic to optical clarity. Use with a 5″ random orbital sander. Please review Tool Box information for additonal product details. Kit Contains: 2 – 5″ Loop Back discs, 1500 Micro-Mesh® 2 – 5″ Loop Back discs, 2400...
micro-surface.com
For a little history: I have worked on De Havilland twin otters where I was given one of these stupid Aircraft Spruce hand kits to address scratches on the interior of the passenger compartment windows. It was frustrating and honestly wasn’t a productive use of time.
On the other hand, working at the Embraer facility assigned to polish out EMB190 scratched cockpit side windows.
The exterior would be pitted from flying, the interior had gouges, meaning really deep scratches from careless flight crews throwing their flight bag or luggage around.
Using power tools it was about a 2 work day job using power tools to fully polish the interior & exterior of both side-view windows to perfect condition. Then it took an additional day for NDT to inspect it with their tools to verify that the window thickness still exceeded minimum values.
The exterior was easy as there weren’t any edges to worry about. The learning curve was figuring out to a heavy enough grit to remove all the damage. Once you used power tools with silicon carbide sandpaper, the surface had a milky look to it. You had no way to see if the surface was good until you polished it all the way out. Meaning you had to do it all over again if you didn’t use an aggressive enough paper.
The other half of the learning curve was to keep the silicon carbide sandpaper away from the interior window frame. I would use metal tape around perimeter of the inner side to keep the silicon carbide sandpaper an inch or so away from the window frame.
If you used a grit heavy too close to a window frame, the random orbital sander left swirls that were really tough to remove.
I damaged the surface of rear canopy of my -7 tip up with chemicals when I stripped it for paint. I have the kit listed above that I bought it for use on my certified aircraft. My plan is to use metal tape to bracket the area to keep the size of the job from getting out of control.