> I use a micro-fiber towel that I treated using a little white polishing compound,which is way up in about the 5-6000 grit range,and follow it up by rubbing Meguiar's #26 yellow carnauba wax into it. Once I get a shaft sanded and sealed like I want,I don't sand it again until I have to replace the tip. If it does get a little sticky,I use either a worn-out piece of 2000 or a slip of 3600 Micro-Mesh I've had since 1992. In cases of real humid conditions,I'll use denatured alcohol and clean all the finish off,down to bare but still slick wood,and use a fresh piece of 2000.
Sandpaper get clogged and some people think it's worn out. Others,like me,have found that once a piece of 600-up is totally loaded,if you keep going it gets "better". As the grit is getting smaller,or falling out,it becomes over time the equivalent of a fresh piece of a higher grit. If you work on a piece of 600 long enough that it gets all slick looking,it's basically the same as 2000. I had a 3"x4" piece of 2500 that was so great I used laminating plastic on the back of it to keep it from getting wrinkled up. I had that thing for 5 years. I lost it in Wal-Mart parking lot. Tommy D.