hernandez.art13
New member
- Apr 8, 2013
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Hey Guys...
From where I'm sitting, I can overhear you!
Bob
:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:
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Hey Guys...
From where I'm sitting, I can overhear you!
Bob
Hey Guys...
From where I'm sitting, I can overhear you!
Bob
He's trying to say that sheeting really means water sticking to the paint in big sheets, thus making it hydrophillic. However, in terms of detailing we use sheeting in terms of water falling off of the paint in big sheets.
Quite. The detailing crowd have really got the terminology confused - beading meaning hydrophobic and sheeting meaning... errrrr... hydrophobic. The worst of it is that many think that the 'sheeting' they are describing is hydrophillic. The problem comes in the 'sheet' definition. A drop of water on a hydrophobic surface forms a 'bead' - all good there. The same droplet on a hydrophilic surface forms a flat sheet (it spreads out flat) - but this isn't what detailers mean by a sheet. In detailing, a sheet is simply a collection of water droplets on a hydrophobic surface but a surface which is not hydrophobic enough to break that sheet up into droplets. In detailing, a bead and a sheet are manifestations of exactly the same surface chemistry.
It has got to the point that some now use the technical, hydrophilic, term to describe the detailers sheet - which is quite the opposite of fact. Worst of all, some of the brands, in a wonderful demonstration of their utter lack of technical expertise, are guilty of this!
In my previous post I was trying to simply state that a very hydrophobic surface is more important because it's going to bead up nice and tall and water will runoff very easily. Hence my comparison.
Believe it or not, contact angle (what makes beads look impressive) and sliding angle (what makes them run off) are quite distinct and not necessarily linked. In fact, many high contact angle surfaces require quite high sliding angles to clear them. In automotive, contact angle is for show, sliding angle is what is actually best.
So is contact angle what makes the beads tall and round, while sliding angle is how easily the water rolls off the surface?
Totally taking a guess here.
Yes. As above, it is often the case that a surface with the highest contact angle won't have the lowest sliding angle. So you can have fantastic beads but they won't clear off the surface as readily as with some less spectacular beading finishes.
sheeting > beading![]()
Yes. As above, it is often the case that a surface with the highest contact angle won't have the lowest sliding angle. So you can have fantastic beads but they won't clear off the surface as readily as with some less spectacular beading finishes.
I say that to myself half the time I read his posts. I have a feeling he'd be a really interesting guy to meet. Ha.