Billy Baldone
New member
- May 11, 2011
- 1,205
- 0
Mike asked for the link to the Costco detailing forum... I would like the link to the "Dinkinking Costco Kirkland French Vodka while detailing" forum please. That is the one I really need
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Infomania > Opioids
Bob
Those super plush ones just flop all over the place and really annoy me.
I greatly dislike ultra plushy towels.
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i've been saying this for many years, really thick towels are limited to what they can do (not very versatile) and will have a tendency to lint more often too. i've spent a lot of money (and wasted) over many years on all kinds of microfiber towels and it's best to just keep it simple. also, thicker towels lose bite and tend to take more passes to remove product as well, think like a mop...
also, thicker towels lose bite and tend to take more passes to remove product as well, think like a mop...
I used them for the entire month of January, exclusively. Rinseless washes, applying spray sealant, wiping down door jambs, and the only use I found I liked for them was an initial drying pass after I went over a panel with one of my Kirkland towels.
The creature edgeless towels only advantage over the ones I already use is that it doesn’t have an edge. I’m simply not willing to spend a premium for something that has a worse user experience, especially when I’ve had no issues with what I’m already using.
Holding them in my hands they don’t feel any “better” than any of the other towels I listed. They’re just more dense, and that’s not something I want in a towel. Anything above 350gsm just doesn’t produce a good user experience for me. I greatly dislike ultra plushy towels.
I’m perfectly willing to drop the cash on something if I feel it’s objectively better, but if the creature towels are an indication of the overall quality of premium towels, I’m simply not impressed.
I’m not looking for justification to not buy the towels. I’m looking for any justification to buy the towels in the first place. I really wanted to like the creature towels.
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I see it to when I click on some links?
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I haven't been told anything by anyone internally. I can take a guess and guess that it has something to do with updating security.
I would also guess it's not a problem if you trust the site you're clicking to... just a guess.... click at your own risk.
I use TinyUrl.com a LOT on this forum to create links because the links to pages on this forum are so L-O-N-G
I also send a LOT of links via e-mail and I know from experience that when I send a LONG link that some devices break-up the link and the result is when the person I send a long link to clicks on it - of course it doesn't work.
So as a work-around I run all our super long links through TinyUrl and then embed the short link as well as send out the short link via e-mails and messages on devices.
I try not to do a lot of hating in my life but one thing for sure... I HATE doing things twice.
:dunno:
And that page has not only been showing up with links to sites outside of AG, today I was getting it for links that take you to products in the AG store...seems strange it would ask me if I trust the site that i am already on when in this forum...lol.
i've been saying this for many years, really thick towels are limited to what they can do (not very versatile) and will have a tendency to lint more often too. i've spent a lot of money (and wasted) over many years on all kinds of microfiber towels and it's best to just keep it simple. also, thicker towels lose bite and tend to take more passes to remove product as well, think like a mop...
There's no way some 80/20 350gsm Costco towel Is better then a 70/30 edgeless 420 Im sorry its just not possible you are lying to yourself.
There's no way some 80/20 350gsm Costco towel Is better then a 70/30 edgeless 420 Im sorry its just not possible you are lying to yourself.
So you’re telling me that, even though these towels can be used for every purpose that I want them to be used for, without inflicting marring on my paint, I should buy more expensive towels.. just because?
If you want to justify the premium price, sure. But if all I have to go on is the manufacturers word that they source the finest microfiber and that their towels are the bees knees, I think I’ll pass.
I’m holding a creature towel and a Kirkland towel at this very moment. One is denser and edgeless, and that’s the only difference I feel. If you can’t give me an objective reason why one is better than the other, you’re statements are just as much conjecture as mine are.
No matter how much people hype up these towels, I’m just not impressed.
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You do understand that some factory’s call the towels 80/20 and some 70/30. The MF yarn is 70/30 to start with then goes through aka woven through the 100% polyester backing at this point it’s closer to 80/20 just depends who labels it
I wouldn’t put much weight on the 70/30 vs 80/20
It’s about the right towel for the right guy. You see some posts that claim the eagle edgeless is the best towel in creation then randomly find ones that people don’t really care for them and don’t understand what they would be even for
Everyone knows PFMs are the best any ways lol![]()
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As someone who uses Costco MF exclusively, why should I be belittled for making a personal preference and personal choice? It is my money, it is my paint and it is my decision. If you have personal experience of a product doing material harm to your paint or you have documented proof that a product is somehow harmful or injurious then please get the word out here. We are all ears.
I exclusively use Costco towels. I have many MF from here and other sources, many were quite expensive. I use Costco towels not because I'm cheap but because they are uniform and I know what to expect, they never lint, they never mar or scratch my paint and they are returnable if I'm not 100% satisfied. If I were cheap I don't think I would have bought Fuzion because any wax having a retail price of US$200 borders on embarrassing and I never would admit that to anyone who is not in the detailer world that I have Fuzion wax. Any detailing product can be compared and criticized by a competitive product. We should all be very thankful that the industry is so competitive because competition makes all products better.
I'm not sure what the value of an edgeless towel is? If you're using a towel correctly the edge should not come in abrasive contact with your paint. The pressure points from your hands should always be away from the seams on the edge and if they are not then your technique may need some adjustment. It just seems like a marketing gimmick to me.
I'd buy a similar offering from here without hesitation if it existed, seeing as I buy about everything else from here. I enjoy supporting AG.
That bolded part is something I always have in the back of my mind. As much as I like the forensics detailing channel, his hesitation to use the kirkland towels seems misplaced. Has anyone watched him buff a panel when he uses them? I think near any towel would induce some type of damage when you're sitting there bearing down on the paint with it, buffing aggressively. But that's not really how I think most people (could be totally wrong) use towels. Using the technique Mike Phillips (thank you, sir) calls breaking open the wax, I can't say I've ever needed more than a light hand to remove even some oily finishing polishes.
How to break open a coating of wax and remove it by creeping out...
I agree. I'd buy a similar offering from here without hesitation if it existed, seeing as I buy about everything else from here. I enjoy supporting AG. It's such an active forum, full of knowledge and good personalities. I'm also willing to spend the premium price for things that just flat out work. Polishers, compounds, waxes, I'm willing to see the value in a purchase instead of the initial shock of the sticker price, even with a consumable like towels.
While I do agree, I honestly wonder why all towels aren't edgeless? If the microfiber is weaved in with the backing, wouldn't sewing around the edge add an extra step? If that's the case adding a silk, microfiber, or any kind of border seems like it would make the towel cost more to manufacture instead of just weaving it and slicing them into the appropriate size, leaving them edgeless. I'm sure there's a logistical reason for this, seeing as I don't manufacture microfiber towels, but it is something I wonder about. I guess keeping in line with marketing gimmicks, it would allow companies to charge a premium for something "new"