We removed the %#$@*! silicone using silicone remover, gasket remover and wooden popsicle sticks sharpened to get it the grooves. Then stripped what was left of the clearcoat. Resealed all the seams with Vulkem, Sikaflex, Parabond &/or Trempro.
Then polished last...polishing is icing on the cake - getting it sealed is/was our number one priority.
Our reasoning was two-fold:
1) the old silicone could chunk off and get in the polish & scratch the skins &/or there's too much of it to polish close to the edges.
2) the polishing compound would cake up in the cracks where the sealer is supposed to go so it may not adhere properly or we would have to clean it all out with the popsicle sticks again before sealing
Seems to have worked well on our first restoration ('64 GT) we are now doing the same on our '56 Safari...albeit skipping the clearcoat step, it never had any.
If it's not sealed - what's the point of everything else? The "bling" won't matter if the wood rot continues and/or it's not dry & useable inside ~
Shari
