So the wife and I just bought a Modern Steel Honda
supposedly the dealer did a ceramic coating, BUT after about a week of light rain it is covered in water spots, is that typical with ceramic?
It's typical if there's something corrosive in the water where you live. This PROBLEM comes up so often I wrote a brand new article for the topic and mostly to draw people's attention away from the wax, sealant or coating and put it where it needs to be,
What's in the water?
anyways to my real question
What would be the best way to maintain the paint for the long haul?
I know this will sound simple but it hold true over time,
Find something you like and use it often
I am not super experienced, I have a DA with some Lake Country CCS pads, I have used Meguiars Ultimate Compound and their Crystal wax, but not really much outside of that.
I know a little about UC
Meguiar's Ultimate Compound History
And I wrote the concept for NXT Tech Wax on page 31 of a report I wrote for Meguiar's called,
The Zaino Case Study,
Only 3 people at Meguiar's ever recognized and gave me credit for this,
Dick Koeth - Strategic Planner at Meguiar's - may he rest in peace
Atticus Firey - Former Vice President of Meguiar's
Gary Silvers - Head of R&D for Meguiar's
Good product. Went from ZERO SALES to the number one selling wax in 8 months back in 2004 - something the "wax industry" had NEVER seen before.
I am a little intimidated by the new Ceramic/NXT type stuff
I just ran out of my Quik Detailer and wax, so I am about to order, hence my asking ha ha
Thanks everybody!
If you want to "install" a ceramic coating, in my opinion, here's the most annoying thing - chemically stripping the paint using a panel wipe before you can apply the coating. Not a big deal, just a pain in the butt. Applying the coating must be done by only applying to small sections at a time - waiting about 30 seconds to a minute and then wiping that section before moving onto a new section.
Unlike a wax which you can apply to an entire car and then wipe off and you don't have to chemically strip the paint - it's a tick different.
Dr. Beasley's just introduced a new one-step cleaner/coating, easy enough to use and you can apply by machine. I'd give it a look.
Review: Dr. Beasley's NSP Z1 - One Step Primer & Nanocoating with Ti02 & Si02 + Composite Engineered Abrasives
You can always change things up later. But it is a one-and-done type product.
And you can apply a dedicated coating over it without the chemical stripping step.
Dr. Beasley's will be my guest here at Autogeek in about 3 weeks.
Training Cars - For the September 2020 Detailing Class
Jim Lafeber aka Dr. Beasley!
Good guy. A real chemist and straight-shooter.
