STOP!!!!
Don't touch it with sandpaper nor steel wool yet!
(OK, NEVER touch it with steel wool!)
but,
There's a new boy on the block.....flat cutting compound.
Back in the day I'd blow the paint on then wet sand progressively and then wish I hadn't because getting the scratches out took DAYS and in the end were never as shiny as when I started....it was either shiny with tiny "orange peel" or flat but not shiny...... I tried and tried to "lay the paint down better" ie make it flatter and shinier from the get-go. I went to ridiculous lengths trying to completely AVOID the "sanding/buffing/polishing" because unless I used lacquer I was never happy.
But no matter how good I got, the job was never FLAT.
So HOW to get flat and still shiny? Basically, back then there were few options. "All hotrods were lacquered"
period.
But mebbeso 6-8 yrs ago a new product hit the scene. "Flat-cutting glaze"
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Meguiar-...MIk9msxpj34QIVPiCtBh1pjA6HEAQYASABEgI0fvD_BwE
Dis stuff is Da' Friggin' BOMB!!!
When it came out it was marketed as "flat-cutting abrasive discs" carried in a sloppy water-based paste.
I of course figgered "scam".....
But it AIN'T!
I've used it on everything from pool cues to gunstocks to even (Lord Forfend!) cars.....
IMO it is THE CRUCIAL STEP between flattening (ie wet-sanding) and mirror polish and it'll even FLATTEN better than it would seem possible.....
This 20 minute vid kinda' explains the "why" of it all if you've time but he just calls the stuff "compound" kinda' missing the fact that whole generations of old guys don't even know it exists....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHEpqYGuUHI
My point it, DO NOT be afraid to flatten it out a liddle, knock off the high spots with blocked wet-sanding then try this "glazing compound"...... It's the furthest thing from the old "water-carried sandpaper" crap of yore. This stuff FLATTENS instead of just making the ripples worse.
And you don't need the power buffer. Just squirt a little on a piece of paper towel and try it.
IMO it is the magic bridge between sanding and polishing..... it just takes all the work out!
Just be careful, it will CUT like sandpaper under power