Here are the steps I use to refinish my Python (close to out-of-box):
- Take the surface to 500 Abralon with a ball spinner on 4 sides of the ball. (Finger holes facing up, finger holes facing down, finger holes facing left, finger holes facing right)
I usually do 20 to 25 seconds a side with 500 Abralon.
- Apply a liberal amount of Brunswick High Gloss Polish on a towel, then smear the polish on the "side" of the ball you're working on a little bit before turning the spinner on (so it doesn't spray you and your surroundings with polish).
Again, use the polish on 4 sides with the towel... (Finger holes facing up, finger holes facing down, finger holes facing left, finger holes facing right)
I usually spin each side until the "white" of the polish goes away while spinning.
After you apply the polish, it'll look a little "funny"... Tacky, dull, smeared polish, etc.
- Once I've polished all 4 sides, I'll take a clean towel and "buff" the ball on the spinner on all 4 sides again, using medium/medium hard pressure - but not too much where it slows the spinner down.
The clean towel will get warm, and you'll see the ball lose the "dull" polish look, and get really, really shiny.
That's the surface that works for me... Others may have an idea on how to tame the back-end reaction down, but you can try experimenting with 2000 Abralon and no polish, or try 500/800/1000 Abralon then High Gloss Polish. All a matter of personal preference.
Remember, when you find a surface that works, write it down, so you can replicate it in the future.
JT