What's the best way to apply Reacta Shine to the ball using a spinner? Putting it on the ball first or on a cloth first? The bottle I have is a milky liquid that is very, very watery, and it tends to run everwhere. Also, after it dries to a haze, is it best to use really firm pressure and "burn" it in to the ball?
The first very important step is to shake the bottle to insure whatever might have precipitated out, gets mixed back in. I'd bet you did not do this thoroughly, because the only truly watery polish I have encountered us Secret Sauce.
(Note: almost all polishes have the abrasive precipitate out of solution over time. That's why every polish instruction starts with "Shake thoroughly". Some are worse than others to mix it back up. Sometimes I have had to use a long flat balded screwdriver to get to the bottom and break up the precipitate. Some need to be shaken for an annoyingly long time.)
What I do for all polishes is to first apply some to the applicator; then use the applicator to smear it across the top half of the ball. This help prevent or at least reduce the amount of splatter, which is wasted polish. Once that is done, I turn on the spinner and work from top down the sides with light to medium pressure (depending on how much shine I want), spending more time on the side because that's the larger surface .
When I do this, I find very little dried haze and can already see the degree of polish that I want. Then I'll take the buffing cloth the remove whatever haze is left and buff it up.
If you want to burn it in to get a very high degree of shine, do that at the 1st stage where you're applying the polish. Start with medium pressure then use firmer pressure, but not so firm you stop the motor or even slow it down. Caution with the pressure. Use more polish for a more glossy shine.
Of course, if you really want a burned in shine, you should take the underlying grit level to 4000 grit and you should be using Xtra Shine.