I used to use a lot of water when sanding, but I don't anymore. I prefer the reaction of the dry sand process. It took me a while to find the best method for dry sanding, but now that I've got it down, I come closer to the box finish than I ever did with wet sanding.
The downsides of dry sanding:
1. Lot of dust. I wear gloves and a dust mask, but some probably still gets in.
2. Pads wear out more quickly. But I figure at about $2.60 a pad, screw it, I don't resurface that many balls anyway.
The upside of dry sanding:
1. As mentioned above, I like the reaction over a wet sanded ball at the same grit(s)
2. Dry sanding is MUCH faster. It takes about half the time as wet sanding for me.
3. I can see the results of each grit level more clearly, so I get closer to what I want.
4. Compound finishes are much easier to create than with wet sanding. I can make a 500 - 4000 finish almost perfect. I was never able to recreate that kind of surface with wet sanding.
5. I actually think I take less surface off the ball each time. I use less pressure and time than wet sanding seems to need, so I think I take a much thinner layer on each pass than when I was wet sanding.
Disclaimer; your results may vary.