Coloring Compounds: Metal Polishing Compound for Buffing Wheels
Renegade Products is the premier manufacturer of metal polishing compounds, made with premium raw materials and no cheap fillers. Our bars are built for quality, not profit margins.
Coloring compounds are used in the second step of polishing with intermediate buffing wheels to refine the initial cut and add a high shine to your metal surfaces.
What Are Metal Polishing Compounds?
Metal polishing compounds are used with Airway Buffing Wheels to enhance performance during cutting, buffing, and polishing stages.
Some bars are coarse for scratch removal. Others are fine, ideal for finishing. Apply compounds by coating the edges of your airway buffing wheels.

What Metal Polishing Compound Should I Use?
Here are our most popular coloring bars and their performance characteristics:
Green Rouge
• Fine to extra-fine abrasives
• “Dry” bar
• Cutting: 3/10
• Dryness: 8/10

White Rouge
• Medium & fine abrasives
• Dry bar
• Cutting: 4/10
• Dryness: 8/10

Blue Rouge
• Fine abrasives, very dry
• High melting point
• Less dense than yellow/black
• Cutting: 4/10
• Dryness: 9/10

Yellow Deluxe
• High fine abrasive concentration
• Balanced, medium-dry
• Cutting: 4/10
• Dryness: 7/10

Wild Berry
• Coarse & medium abrasives
• Balanced wetness
• Cutting: 6/10
• Dryness: 6/10

True Green
• Fine abrasives
• Medium-dry, enhanced with Green Oxide
• Works on aluminum & stainless
• Cutting: 4/10
• Dryness: 7/10

Recommended Polishers for Compounds:
MAKITA 9237C – Ideal 3,500 RPM buffer for pros & beginners
MAKITA GA7021 – High-performance 6,000 RPM buffer for professionals
How to Prep for Polishing:
Sanding is key. Start with 180 grit, step up to 220, and finish with 400 grit sanding discs before polishing aluminum with tripoli compound.
Alternatively, use buff & blend prep discs:
• Blue – Removes grime, rust; may leave marks
• Maroon Satin Airway – Use before polishing for finer finish
Avoid green prep discs unless working on concrete wheels.
What Do the Colors Mean?
Polishing compound color is typically derived from natural abrasives in the formula. For example, Tripoli powder gives the bar its reddish hue.
In some cases, we add dyes or pigments to differentiate formulas that appear similar in color but perform differently.

Pro Tip:
Between major cut stages, use Renegade Red Liquid Metal Polish, Pro Red, or Pipe Dream Chrome Conditioner to maintain a brilliant, show-quality shine.