The Jescar Correcting Compound is another product from Jescar that I was able to test pretty thoroughly on a few different cars. We used it at the shop how we normally use aggressive polishes, which is with a Lake Country Wool Pad. However I also tried it out with an orange foam pad as well as a couple microfiber pads just to see what happens. Overall I enjoyed using Jescar’s Compound and it performed really well compared to other products we use. Normally we use Meguiar’s M100 as well as M105 for more involved correction, but Jescar Correcting Compound performed really well and we’ve been using that as well.
Unfortunately I lost some of the photos I took showing paint condition right after this compound was used, but it didn’t leave too much haze. What was left easily corrected using a milder polish and the paint looked pretty perfect after. We initially used Jescar Correcting Compound on a black Maserati with pretty swirled paint and it cleaned it up really well. In the photos you’ll see we used a Lake Country Force Orange Pad on the door and a Lake Country Wool Pad on the bumper (bumper was harder to correct due to all the flexing). The black paint was fairly soft so using this compound with the orange pad was more than enough and the finishing polish cleaned it up really well.
Here’s the bumper that was heavily swirled…
This is the door which looks just as bad or worse than the bumper but paint here was easier to correct and came out great…
Another car we corrected with Jescar Correcting Compound was this blue Corvette that was in MUCH worse shape than the Maserati. Here we used the wool pad on the whole car and did some sections twice. The finishing stage on the Corvette was much easier due to the harder paint. Here’s a little 50/50 on the quarter panel…
This shows the really bad condition of the Corvette paint with swirls, water spots, etc…
As you can see it corrected to perfection and this is how most of the car came out…
Overall I’m very happy with Jescar Correcting Compound and will keep using it regularly. It doesn’t dust as much as some other stuff but also isn’t too aggressive so it’s a perfect compound for anyone to have around the shop. It’s very beginner friendly and spreads fairly well, has a decent working time and wipes off easily without much residue left behind. I also liked that it corrects pretty easily with finishing polishes and works on multiple paint types.