*NEW* DP Tire Coating & DP Tire Cleaner & Restorer

I'd be willing to do a complete and fair review of the new tire coating from DP, especially since I've always been a big fan of DP and have a lot of experience with one of its biggest competitors, Turtle Wax Jet Black Endurance. I guess time will tell but I know this, my wife's tires are in need of a good coat, they're stripped down right now...hint, hint;)

Sent from my SPH-M930 using Tapatalk 2
 
Tire compounds and climates vary. I've seen the coating last as long as a year and a half on some tires, and as long as 4 months on others.

Thank you very much. Purchased!

Of course that's with proper application - ie: using DP Tire Cleaner & Restorer first. This step is imperative.
We encourage all comparisons! :dblthumb2:

Hmm. I see a challenge brewing there:

Tuf Shine cleaner + DP coating v. DP cleaner + DP coating!
 
Tuf shine is known for their durability.
Now if this new DP product cae prove to be on par with Tuf shines durability, but with easier application then it will be a winner in my book....
 
With all the attention this kit is getting......I think we need a giveaway! :dblthumb2:
 
My test will take some time as I'll be buying this around Christmas and will wait till spring to try it out as I'll be getting my new, 3 season tires then, thus a virgin tire will be available for testing. Meanwhile, I'll enjoy the test/reviews by others;)

Sent from my SPH-M930 using Tapatalk 2
 
Here's what the Black Magic owned Bleache-White looked like on tires I did today, used an old ECO TOUCH sprayer too, so much for it not working as said earlier:



Sent from my SPH-M930 using Tapatalk 2
 
With all the attention this kit is getting......I think we need a giveaway! :dblthumb2:

Great idea! I'll see what I can whip up today...:dblthumb2:

My test will take some time as I'll be buying this around Christmas and will wait till spring to try it out as I'll be getting my new, 3 season tires then, thus a virgin tire will be available for testing. Meanwhile, I'll enjoy the test/reviews by others;)

Sent from my SPH-M930 using Tapatalk 2

Looking forward to hearing your thoughts! Im the MAN
 

Yes; Winter is coming and the true test can begin between this and Tuff Shine...
 
:props:

Can't wait to try it out

watermark.php
 
Well, I've purchased a bottle of the DP Tire Coating and the DP Tire cleaner. I've had mixed results so far.

First set of tires where purchased same day they were coated and only had the factory mold release coating on them. Used Bleeche-White tire cleaner first 2 times in effort to save on the DP tire cleaner. The second cleaning produced white foam. Then cleaned with the DP Tire cleaner 2 more times. Both times I only got white foam. Did it the second time with the DP just to make sure. They were big truck tires with large side knobs. I applied 3 coats to the tires applying the next layer after I had done all 4 tires so there was at least 30 min between layers. The coating is still going strong. The truck was driven up to Boston, MA during that Nor'easter over Thanksgiving driving through rain then sleet then 10-12" of snow as it travelled north.

The second set of tires were on my own car. The tires are 1 year old Michelin Pilots with 8000 miles. I've only purchased the car in October and the tires have only had whatever the dealer put on them when I purchased the car. Whatever it was it faded quickly and they had been washed with a sponge with CG Citrus Clear Red and CG Strong Wash prepwash combo that I used on the car. They were also washed with a sponge with the Autoglym PowerMax3 TFR that I also used when prepping the car for polishing. There were no signs of the dealer dressing at this point. Two months later when I'm finally done with paint, I jacked up the car and removed these wheels so I could Opti-Coat them of which I put 3 layers on.

I again cleaned the tires with the Bleeche-White tire cleaner 2 times and then cleaned with the DP Tire cleaner 3 times. Only got a slight amount of dirt with the first DP cleaning. The 2nd and 3rd times I only got white foam. The tires were allowed to dry for more than 24 hours while I worked on hand polishing the wheels and applying the Opti-Coat. The driver's side tires received 3 layers about 20-30 minutes apart. They were always dry to the touch before reapplying. The passenger side tires also got 3 layers of tire coating but with much longer times between coats. It was 6 hours after the 1st then waited overnight for the 3rd.

Well, yesterday was the first time I've taken the car out of the garage in 2.5 months (been a slow process working on it whenever I could find the time). That DP Tire coating had about 7-9 days of drying in the garage. I went to Walmart today which is about a 5 mile drive. When I got to Walmart all 4 tires had the coating totally flaking off. Looked like peeling sunburnt skin. The dust flakes of it were sticking to the sides and back of the car.

I was shocked that it could completely fail like that from a 5 mile drive. The tires were clean, at least I thought so. I did 2-3 cleanings on each tire that produced only white foam. Honestly I thought I was going overboard on the cleaning but wanted to see how long this could last.

So the obvious problem must be that there is still something on the rubber preventing the coating from bonding. If there is then it produces no color change when cleaning with the DP Tire Cleaner and apparently it not strong enough to remove whatever is on my tires. But damn. that was 2 cleanings with Bleeche-White and the 2-3 cleanings with the DP Tire Cleaner. They sure looked clean and felt stripped.

What other factors do you think could be at play here? Could it be that Michelin Pilots tires have a high silicone rubber content that don't take dressings well? Could it have ben the temperature of the rubber when the coating was applied? It was not warm, only about 40-55 degrees outside when I applied it. The rubber was cold. Could I have applied too much per layer? The product application description sure makes it sound like you wet the tire with the coating instead of trying to spread it far in thin layers. It always dried fine and smooth with no signs of excess.

When I installed the wheels back on the car they looked great. The tires were nice and black with a slightly glossier than satin sheen. The look reminded me of the Optimum Opti-Bond tire gel look.

Well I'll obviously have to reclean the tires and try again. However, the Opticoat on the wheels was only applied about 2-3 weeks ago and I want to give it its 30 day full cure time before using the harsh tire cleaners again just to be safe. So I guess I'll be driving around with peeling tires for a few weeks.

It was so disappointing that it only last 5 miles! Hope this isn't another snake-oil tonic product.
 
Very good description of the issue. My answer isn't going to be as long....temp is the problem.

I haven't my kit yet but I have used the TW tire coating and it says to apply between 55 and 85 degrees.

The other factor could very well be the type of rubber going on too but you cleaned the he'll out of them and did proper coats with more than enough time in between for drying.

Keep US posted.
 
Well, I've purchased a bottle of the DP Tire Coating and the DP Tire cleaner. I've had mixed results so far.

First set of tires where purchased same day they were coated and only had the factory mold release coating on them. Used Bleeche-White tire cleaner first 2 times in effort to save on the DP tire cleaner. The second cleaning produced white foam. Then cleaned with the DP Tire cleaner 2 more times. Both times I only got white foam. Did it the second time with the DP just to make sure. They were big truck tires with large side knobs. I applied 3 coats to the tires applying the next layer after I had done all 4 tires so there was at least 30 min between layers. The coating is still going strong. The truck was driven up to Boston, MA during that Nor'easter over Thanksgiving driving through rain then sleet then 10-12" of snow as it travelled north.

The second set of tires were on my own car. The tires are 1 year old Michelin Pilots with 8000 miles. I've only purchased the car in October and the tires have only had whatever the dealer put on them when I purchased the car. Whatever it was it faded quickly and they had been washed with a sponge with CG Citrus Clear Red and CG Strong Wash prepwash combo that I used on the car. They were also washed with a sponge with the Autoglym PowerMax3 TFR that I also used when prepping the car for polishing. There were no signs of the dealer dressing at this point. Two months later when I'm finally done with paint, I jacked up the car and removed these wheels so I could Opti-Coat them of which I put 3 layers on.

I again cleaned the tires with the Bleeche-White tire cleaner 2 times and then cleaned with the DP Tire cleaner 3 times. Only got a slight amount of dirt with the first DP cleaning. The 2nd and 3rd times I only got white foam. The tires were allowed to dry for more than 24 hours while I worked on hand polishing the wheels and applying the Opti-Coat. The driver's side tires received 3 layers about 20-30 minutes apart. They were always dry to the touch before reapplying. The passenger side tires also got 3 layers of tire coating but with much longer times between coats. It was 6 hours after the 1st then waited overnight for the 3rd.

Well, yesterday was the first time I've taken the car out of the garage in 2.5 months (been a slow process working on it whenever I could find the time). That DP Tire coating had about 7-9 days of drying in the garage. I went to Walmart today which is about a 5 mile drive. When I got to Walmart all 4 tires had the coating totally flaking off. Looked like peeling sunburnt skin. The dust flakes of it were sticking to the sides and back of the car.

I was shocked that it could completely fail like that from a 5 mile drive. The tires were clean, at least I thought so. I did 2-3 cleanings on each tire that produced only white foam. Honestly I thought I was going overboard on the cleaning but wanted to see how long this could last.

So the obvious problem must be that there is still something on the rubber preventing the coating from bonding. If there is then it produces no color change when cleaning with the DP Tire Cleaner and apparently it not strong enough to remove whatever is on my tires. But damn. that was 2 cleanings with Bleeche-White and the 2-3 cleanings with the DP Tire Cleaner. They sure looked clean and felt stripped.

What other factors do you think could be at play here? Could it be that Michelin Pilots tires have a high silicone rubber content that don't take dressings well? Could it have ben the temperature of the rubber when the coating was applied? It was not warm, only about 40-55 degrees outside when I applied it. The rubber was cold. Could I have applied too much per layer? The product application description sure makes it sound like you wet the tire with the coating instead of trying to spread it far in thin layers. It always dried fine and smooth with no signs of excess.

When I installed the wheels back on the car they looked great. The tires were nice and black with a slightly glossier than satin sheen. The look reminded me of the Optimum Opti-Bond tire gel look.

Well I'll obviously have to reclean the tires and try again. However, the Opticoat on the wheels was only applied about 2-3 weeks ago and I want to give it its 30 day full cure time before using the harsh tire cleaners again just to be safe. So I guess I'll be driving around with peeling tires for a few weeks.

It was so disappointing that it only last 5 miles!

First, skip the Bleech White. The directions call for DP Tire Cleaner & Restorer (for the entire cleaning process). With any type of coating, it's imperative that you follow the manufacturer's instructions to the T.

Second, I would wait until it gets a little warmer to apply the coating (60 degrees at the least), and instead of applying multiple thin coats, I found it better to apply one thick, substantial coat. Of course you can apply it either way, but in my experience you'll achieve better results with one (thick) coat. We'll update the instructions on the website to better outline the ideal temperature range for proper application.

As a courtesy I'll replace the product you lost. Send me a PM with your order number.

Hope this isn't another snake-oil tonic product.

Rest assured we're not in the business of selling products that don't work. Implement the outline tips and techniques and you'll achieve much better results on the Michelins. :dblthumb2:
 
DP has a great rep and the thought has NEVER crossed my mind that they're selling a "snake oil" product here, no way, no how.

I'm looking forward to using my brand new kit come spring, I've only opened the box to see what's all in there. Once I get my new tires I will drive the car a bit, clean with my rinsless wash and then use everything in the kit, hoping to remove everything from the brand new tires, this is why I wanna wait and get some miles on them and maybe just a simple rinseless of them first. I have high expectations from the great people over at DP, another company that gives you great products without alot of fancy packaging or goofy names, those in the know, well, we know:dblthumb2:
 
Well, yesterday was the first time I've taken the car out of the garage in 2.5 months (been a slow process working on it whenever I could find the time). That DP Tire coating had about 7-9 days of drying in the garage. I went to Walmart today which is about a 5 mile drive. When I got to Walmart all 4 tires had the coating totally flaking off. Looked like peeling sunburnt skin. The dust flakes of it were sticking to the sides and back of the car.

Your issue of the flaking sounds similar to what I've noticed but it wasn't to that extent where I saw flakes sticking to my car. Maybe it was but my car is white and it could've blended. But there was that "sunburnt skin" appearance around the wall of the tire close to the outer wheel edge. This occurred during the first couple drives for me as well. When I saw that, I was somewhat in denial thinking maybe I applied the product wrong because I know DP has great products. So I just cleaned the burnt skin area off with car wash, let the tires dry, and applied more DP tire coating. Since then the flaking hasn't been that noticeable but I still don't think the product should've done that in the first place.

I also applied the product during cold temperatures since I just purchased the kit during Black Friday and couldn't wait to use it. Tire subjects were Bridgestone tires on brand new car with ~2k miles on it.
 
I've had pretty good durability from my DP tire coating.

I used Tuf Shine, Meguairs degreaser and the DP cleaner. Cleaned 4 tires: two with DP, 1 with Meg and 1 with Tuf Shine. These were tires that were prepped last spring and coated with PERL while they sat through the summer.

When winter (at least here) rolled around, I cleaned all 4 as above. Got all the PERL out as I could tell. White foam with all three cleaners. Couldn't rub any dust or dirt off the tires.

I applied two thick coatings to my tires. Unlike what was recommended, my application was well below 60 degrees.

They've all done well. I see no difference in the quality of all 4 tires, regardless of the cleaning agent.

The tires have that nice dark satin look to them...no gloss.

It has been rainy and dirty, but no real snow or salt on the roads yet. I think the salt will probably kill the coating. But, it's been about 6 weeks with the coating.

Better than PERL IMHO.
 
There's NO doubt that these tire coatings are much better than any tire dressing out there, hands down!
 
I'm not really sure what to do with my old dressings🚽
 
Back
Top