To specify, what is the difference between rebatching a soap you have poured into a mold but has a problem, so you want to rebatch it, and using a melt and pour base to make a soap?
I had to think about this, because I can see how confusing this can be: "Rebatching" refers to the process of taking CP/HP soap, grating it, adding water, melting it down and making new soap from it. When you make Melt & Pour Soap, you take a 'base', cut it up into small pieces, melt it down and make new soap from it.
The thing is...M&P is a different kind of soap. While it contains many of the same ingredients as soap made via CP or HP...like Coconut Oil, Palm Oil, Safflower Oil, Shea Butter, Water and Sodium Hydroxide...that is where the similarities end. To be able to 'melt and pour', the M&P 'base' also contains high amounts of Glycerin, along with Sorbitol and Propylene Glycol. And depending on the type of 'base' you purchase...it may also contain Sodium Lauryl Sulfate, Sodium Chloride, Triethanolamine, Sodium Chloride, EDTA, Sodium Lauryl Sulfate, Stearic Acid, Lauric Acid, Pentasodium Pentetate to name of few of them.
It seems like when you rebatch, you never get as smooth a pour as the first time. Is that the case with a melt and pour base? If not, what is the difference?
While it is true that the majority of time, 'rebatched' CP soap has a more 'rustic' appearance, if you're really good at it, it can be difficult to tell the difference.
Again, M&P is a different kind of soap. It is formulated to be able to produce a smooth bar a soap...providing of course, you don't overheat it or reheat it too many times