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Would Sig II be better then Fusion and Souveran for Metallics? I have all 3 waxes and wanted to know which to use on my car. Which is going be best for Grigio Metallic in order from best to good lol.
It doesn't matter, put all 3 in a bag, reach in and use the one you grab. I don't fall for all of this making flakes pop BS. I have tried many waxes and none have made any difference in the way the flake looks.
I'll disagree with you on that one. While I don't dispute that no LSP can make flakes "pop" much more than what they look like after polishing, there are LSP's that tend to darken and mute the flakes to a degree. I found this to be the case with Opti-Seal on silver metallic for example.
We will just agree to disagree![]()
It doesn't matter, put all 3 in a bag, reach in and use the one you grab. I don't fall for all of this making flakes pop BS. I have tried many waxes and none have made any difference in the way the flake looks.
Dwayne, that finish looks awfully cloudy to me!.....:laughing:
I know man, I'm such a rookie![]()
after seeing those pictures, I think everything I have been told is a lie....this even makes me even question the existence of santa clause or the Easter bunny....
That was one of the most well written and educated sounding posts until the last few sentences. I'm sorry, I'm not trying to argue, but there is no way to tell what a wax will look like on a paint while it is still in the jar. It's just not possible. Some of the Dodo waxes are almost totally opaque in the jar but look faboulous on the paint. With that being said there are some waxes with no coloring that don't look quite as good. In all hoesty most waxes will look close enough that you wouldn't be able to tell the diffrence if you didn't know.I seem to be developing the ability to tell which waxes will look great on a car just by looking at the wax in the jar. Higher quality waxes have a more translucent appearance in the jar, and less opaque. You can't have the deepest richest layer of wax on a car if it wasn't in the jar to begin with.
I seem to be developing the ability to tell which waxes will look great on a car just by looking at the wax in the jar.
I seem to be developing the ability to tell which waxes will look great on a car just by looking at the wax in the jar.
I seem to be developing the ability to tell which waxes will look great on a car just by looking at the wax in the jar. Higher quality waxes have a more translucent appearance in the jar, and less opaque. You can't have the deepest richest layer of wax on a car if it wasn't in the jar to begin with.
That was one of the most well written and educated sounding posts until the last few sentences. I'm sorry, I'm not trying to argue, but there is no way to tell what a wax will look like on a paint while it is still in the jar. It's just not possible. Some of the Dodo waxes are almost totally opaque in the jar but look faboulous on the paint. With that being said there are some waxes with no coloring that don't look quite as good. In all hoesty most waxes will look close enough that you wouldn't be able to tell the diffrence if you didn't know.
I could post up two pictures of cars with totally different LSP's and I doubt anyone could tell them apart just by looking at them.
No, I am saying that they all have a similar look about them. When I say more translucent, I mean a little more, not a lot. Let's be honest, all wax allows light through it, so that you can see the paint, delivering clarity, thus, higher quality wax has a more translucent appearance than lower quality, or less pure or refined carnauba, because it allows less light through, and reduced clarity, generally speaking. Otherwise, how would we get the clarity? Does that make sense to you?Help me understand your comment here, basically what you're saying is that Swissvax Concorso, Mystery, or even Crystal Rock are not quality waxes because they aren't translucent in the jar?
No, I am saying that they all have a similar look about them. When I say more translucent, I mean a little more, not a lot. Let's be honest, all wax allows light through it, so that you can see the paint, delivering clarity, thus, higher quality wax has a more translucent appearance than lower quality, or less pure or refined carnauba, because it allows less light through, and reduced clarity, generally speaking. Otherwise, how would we get the clarity? Does that make sense to you?
I seem to be developing the ability to tell which waxes will look great on a car just by looking at the wax in the jar. Higher quality waxes have a more translucent appearance in the jar, and less opaque. You can't have the deepest richest layer of wax on a car if it wasn't in the jar to begin with.