Description
Perfection Is Not Applied. It Is Drawn Out.
The Obsidian Hand is a rotary polisher for the detailer who understands that a buffer is not a sander — it is a surgeon's tool for clearcoat. At 1,400 watts, the motor delivers torque that resists bogging under pressure, maintaining a true 800 to 3,500 RPM range through six variable speeds. Most polishers in this class use universal motors that shed RPM the moment you lean into a correction pass — the pad slows, the abrasive breaks down unevenly, and the result is a panel that looks finished under shop lights but reveals holograms under direct sun. The Obsidian Hand uses a wound-field motor with electronic speed regulation, holding RPM within 5% of setpoint regardless of applied pressure up to 15 pounds of downward force.
The D-handle geometry is not cosmetic. By shifting the center of gravity forward of the grip axis, the handle gives you fingertip control over pad angle during edge work — the moment where 90% of buffer holograms are born. A traditional bail handle places the operator's force behind the pad, converting wrist angle into pad tilt. The D-handle places force above the pad, converting grip pressure into pad flatness. The difference is visible on the first panel: a true, hologram-free finish that requires no follow-up with a dual-action polisher to clean up rotary trails.
The soft-start circuit ramps RPM over 1.5 seconds on trigger pull, preventing the sudden torque spike that slings compound across the garage floor before the pad touches paint. The spindle lock enables one-wrench pad changes between cutting and finishing stages — no pin wrench, no holding the backing plate against motor torque. The six-speed dial is gated, not continuous, so your speed setting survives the vibration of a full correction job. This is not a polisher. It is a paint correction instrument for the obsessively precise, and it does not forgive sloppy technique — but it also does not require it.
✦ Key Features
- ✦ 1400W Wound-Field Motor — Torque-dense design resists RPM drop under load; holds speed within 5% at 15 lbs pressure
- ✦ 800-3500 RPM Variable Speed — Six gated detent positions; covers cutting (1500+), polishing (1200-1800), and finishing (800-1200)
- ✦ D-Handle with Forward CG — Places operator grip above the pad for flat-angle control; eliminates hologram-inducing pad tilt
- ✦ Soft-Start Anti-Sling Circuit — 1.5-second RPM ramp on trigger pull; compound stays on the pad, not the floor
- ✦ Spindle Lock — Single-wrench backing plate changes; switch from wool cutting pad to foam finishing pad in seconds
- ✦ Electronic Speed Regulation — Maintains RPM under variable load; no hunting or surging mid-pass
- ✦ Includes Backing Plate + 2 Pads — Ready to use out of the box with a 6-inch hook-and-loop backing plate and starter pad set
Technical Specifications
- Motor Power: 1400W
- Speed Range: 800 – 3,500 RPM (6-speed gated dial)
- Motor Type: Wound-field with electronic speed regulation
- Handle Type: D-handle (forward center of gravity)
- Spindle Thread: M14 (standard rotary)
- Backing Plate: 6-inch (150mm) hook-and-loop, included
- Soft Start: Yes (1.5-second ramp)
- Spindle Lock: Yes
- Power Cord: 4 meters (13 ft), rubber-jacketed
- Weight: Approx. 2.8 kg (6.2 lbs)
Application Scenarios
The Obsidian Hand is built for correction work that separates professional results from weekend attempts. Automotive detailers use it with wool cutting pads and medium-cut compounds to remove 2,000-grit sanding marks after spot repairs, then switch to foam finishing pads for jeweling — the speed regulation means the pad behavior is predictable at every stage. Marine detailers deploy it on gel coat oxidation, where the sustained torque prevents the pad from stalling against the harder surface. Furniture refinishers use the low-speed range (800-1,200 RPM) with lambswool bonnets to apply and buff paste wax into tabletops and turned legs. For the detailer who has been fighting a dual-action polisher that stalls on curved panels and a cheap rotary that leaves holograms, The Obsidian Hand is not an upgrade — it is a different category of tool entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is this suitable for a beginner, or only for experienced detailers?
A: Rotary polishers require more technique than dual-action (DA) polishers — they can burn through clearcoat if held stationary at high RPM. If you have never used a rotary before, start on a scrap panel at 800-1,200 RPM with a soft foam pad. The soft-start and speed regulation make The Obsidian Hand more forgiving than a basic rotary, but the learning curve still exists. Experienced users will appreciate the torque and control immediately.
Q: What is the difference between this rotary and a dual-action (DA) polisher?
A: A rotary spins the pad in a fixed orbit — it cuts faster, finishes sharper, and requires more control. A DA oscillates the pad in a random orbit — it is safer for beginners but cuts slower and cannot achieve the same level of correction on heavy defects. The Obsidian Hand is a rotary. Pair it with a DA for finishing if you are new to paint correction, or use it alone if you have the experience to finish rotary-only.
Q: Can this be used for sanding or grinding, or only polishing?
A: This is a polisher, not an angle grinder. The M14 spindle accepts standard rotary backing plates and pads, not grinding wheels or sanding discs. Using it as a grinder will overload the motor and void the warranty. For paint stripping via sanding discs, use a dedicated DA sander.
Q: What pads and compounds do you recommend for best results?
A: For correction: medium-cut compound with a microfiber or wool cutting pad at 1,500-1,800 RPM. For polishing: finishing polish with a medium-density foam pad at 1,200-1,500 RPM. For jeweling (final step): ultra-fine polish with a soft black foam pad at 800-1,000 RPM. Always prime the pad with compound before contacting paint, and clean or swap pads between panels.
Q: Does it come with a case, and what is the cord length?
A: The polisher ships in a fitted cardboard box with foam inserts, not a hard case. The power cord is 4 meters (approximately 13 feet), rubber-jacketed for flexibility and oil resistance in shop environments. An extension cord is still recommended for full-vehicle work — use a 12-gauge cord for runs over 25 feet to avoid voltage drop and motor strain.
Customer Reviews
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