A while back I snapped up a 10" auto polisher at a sale for $25, which is half the best price I'd ever seen. Just saw the price and didn't even check the specs. Thought I'd got a bargain.<br /><br />Was useless when I tried it. No guts. My power drill kills it as a polisher.<br /><br />The thread on "Restoring Sanded Gelcoat" http://www.iboats.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=26;t=002678 got me looking at some polishing machines today. Then it got me looking at the one I bought.<br /><br />The 7" sanders like the one in the gelcoat thread are generally rated from about 1200 to 1600 watts. If the one in the gelcoat thread is meant for 110V it's a 1200 watt machine.<br /><br />In case you don't use watts in the US, 1 horsepower = about 750 watts.<br /><br />Then I checked my bargain. No watts or horsepower stated. Just 240v and .33 (that's point 33) amps. It's a real powerhouse with all of 80 watts, or less than one tenth of a horsepower. Not to mention driving a pad with maybe twice the surface area of a 7" pad. Not hard to work out why the maker didn't state the power conventionally in watts or horsepower. So that suckers like me wouldn't realise what a useless piece of junk it is.<br /><br />Not surprising that my power drill is better. It has 8 times the power. Not surprising that real polishers, like the one in the gelcoat thread, are even better. They have at least twice the power of my drill. Or up to 20 times the power of my useless polisher.<br /><br />I must write out 100 times: Always check the power ratings before buying. Just because the tool looks like the other ones doesn't mean it'll do the same job.