Odisious
New member
- Jan 11, 2015
- 217
- 0
I generally use sealants or waxes but all this talk about coatings has me more intrigued than ever, so here is my question for all you coating experts. Would you recommend applying a coating one panel at a time or all in one session. The reason I ask is because I don't really have the time or energy/motivation to work much more then one panel at a time.
Most coatings themselves apply extremely quickly...faster than all waxes, and most sealants (25minutes on a mid size sedan). They actually in most cases are like applying wowas, but you do need the "wipe off" to prevent high spots.
That being said, your time will go into the prep work. If you take the time to do a coating you might as well do a full decontamination, and correction. If you don't correct that's (kind of) okay, make sure to use paint cleaners/IPA/coating prep polishes to make sure the paint is ready to accept the coating. All of those things I just mentioned will eat up your time. If you have a set time in the year you do your correction anyways...you might think about just waiting until then to coat the sucker.
You could take the approach to prep and then coat a portion at a time...personally that's just weird to me, but it's a preference thing. You could prep and coat a door a day for example...I'd try to get the panels done as close to the same time as possible to have them wear evenly and uniformly.