Cobra Indigo Microfiber Polishing Cloth - 12 pack purchase comments

mg6045

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Hello everyone,

I'm imagining this may not be the most popular review/opinion/comment on the site, but here goes.

I own many of the AG cobra towels, and have seen mostly improvements on there brand of towels in the past. The majority of the time, the towels are reliable and worth the purchase.

When the towels were originally released, I bought 6 of them, and have gotten a lot of use out of them. The original 6 pack I purchased were good safe towels, that were exactly as described on the website add. Good quality weave, with true seamless edge's. The towels were constructed of high quality and there edge's were stratchless.

Cobra Indigo Microfiber Polishing Cloth

So a few weeks ago I made another order for 12 towels, costing 80.00 dollars. When I got the towels, I inspected them like I normally would, and was immediately very disappointed.

IMO, the quality and craftsmanship of these towels has taken a giant plunge like no other product I have seen Autogeek stamp there name on. And for mainly 2 manufacturing reasons. Which go against the entire reason a towel like this was designed.

reason #1 - The edge's of the towels are now HOT WIRE CUT !!! Meaning they are cut with a hot band that slices through the towel in the process melting the fibers that it comes in contact with. turning them into extremely hard melted bands of plastic like substance. If you dont know what hot wire cutting is, here is a statement i found when i googled it in relation to microfiber towels. The bottom line is that the edge's of the towels scratch badly. They scratched and gouged the CD test worse than any other towel edge I have ever tested.

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Hot wire cuts: Towels produced in bulk are typically hot wire cut by the thousands leading to hard scratchy edges. The materials that compose a microfiber are man-made and melt at high heat, so by utilizing hot wire cutting these edges are melted into solid hard plastic like pieces. The melting and heat can impact the towels as far as a 1/4" or more into the face of the towel leaving you with very scratchy fibers.
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reason #2 - Which is related to reason #1, because of the (what I consider cheap) manufacturing process of hot wire cutting, the towels are not even true and square in shape. each of the 12 towels are cut and shaped differently and slightly different in size. the edge's are even wavy and jagged because it looks as if they were not cut with any care.

And thats it. Because of this, I decided not to use the towels anywhere near my new car. Not even for interior or wheel use (i have delicate, painted and clear coated wheels). I actually gave the 12 towels to my mom to use in the kitchen.

I know microfiber towels pretty well imo. as I buy lots of them from all different brands. Obviously, I have found towels in the past which I considered not worthy that I tossed aside. But i'm surprised that I had this experience with Autogeek.

I really like spending my money with Autogeek and will continue to do so. I have a new car waiting to arrive mid January and with a lot of my bonus money I made this year, I decided to buy all new car care products, and in the past couple month's I bought quite a bit here. I didnt make this thread with the intent to receive new products or to return the item's. Even if I was offered something like this I would refuse.

Happy new year everyone
 
thx dubbin, I already went to there site to shop after seeing your guys reviews on them :)
 
reason #1 - The edge's of the towels are now HOT WIRE CUT !!! Meaning they are cut with a hot band that slices through the towel in the process melting the fibers that it comes in contact with. turning them into extremely hard melted bands of plastic like substance. If you dont know what hot wire cutting is, here is a statement i found when i googled it in relation to microfiber towels. The bottom line is that the edge's of the towels scratch badly. They scratched and gouged the CD test worse than any other towel edge I have ever tested.

+1

I've noticed the same thing on my towels. Why would we want to pay a premium for towels when we are receiving sub par products. I demoted mines to windows as soon as I saw the hot wire edges. I've been looking into the meg's ultimate wipes because of this.
 
Such a shame. You should have sent them back to AG. They would have taken care of you.

I really liked the indigo towels that I got last year which have soft edges and a nice feel. I have to admit that they bleed blue dye like crazy.

If AG's manufacturer has gone to hot wire cutting, I guess no more Indigos for me. I know about Pakshak.
 
Seems like that purchase was too expensive to be used as kitchen rags.I would of asked AG to take back the $80 of MF's.
 
I hope their black all purpose ones arent the same, just ordered some from the bogo.. I know there was a thread about it, but anyone here have experience with Poorboys DMT's? Im really interested in getting some.
 
Seems like that purchase was too expensive to be used as kitchen rags.I would of asked AG to take back the $80 of MF's.

Ouch. I agree.

Autogeek is a big place though you must realize.

Sometimes there are quality control issues as with any retailer who isn't making their own products, and its possible that with all of the products autogeek deals with every day that they didn't even notice or know that some of their stock has these edges.

I would sure hope they would agree to a return of the product for a refund.
 
Cobra Indigo Microfiber Polishing Cloth

reason #1 - The edge's of the towels are now HOT WIRE CUT !!! Meaning they are cut with a hot band that slices through the towel in the process melting the fibers that it comes in contact with. turning them into extremely hard melted bands of plastic like substance. If you dont know what hot wire cutting is, here is a statement i found when i googled it in relation to microfiber towels. The bottom line is that the edge's of the towels scratch badly. They scratched and gouged the CD test worse than any other towel edge I have ever tested.

*****************
Hot wire cuts: Towels produced in bulk are typically hot wire cut by the thousands leading to hard scratchy edges. The materials that compose a microfiber are man-made and melt at high heat, so by utilizing hot wire cutting these edges are melted into solid hard plastic like pieces. The melting and heat can impact the towels as far as a 1/4" or more into the face of the towel leaving you with very scratchy fibers.
*****************

I went to the link and there is a picture of the edge of these clothes.I also noticed this quote:

"The woven loops of microfiber serve as their own hem; they will not unravel no matter how many times you wash it."

That being said,maybe you were shipped the wrong one's or some other mix up??The one's in the link are clearly not wire cut.If you were shipped the correct clothes,the product description would be mis-leading as the edges should be woven loops.
 
just got my pack of 3 indigo MF towels yesterday. having read this post, i went to inspect the edges more closely and you are right! those are some rough and hard plastic edges. this is disappointing as the whole reason of spending that extra money on buying edgeless towels is that it won't create scratches. hm.....wonder what i am going to do with these now. maybe use a pair of scissors and just trim off the rough plastic edges as clean as possible.
 
just got my pack of 3 indigo MF towels yesterday. having read this post, i went to inspect the edges more closely and you are right! those are some rough and hard plastic edges. this is disappointing as the whole reason of spending that extra money on buying edgeless towels is that it won't create scratches. hm.....wonder what i am going to do with these now. maybe use a pair of scissors and just trim off the rough plastic edges as clean as possible.

You may have some fraying issues after you wash them if you cut the edges.
 
Got a picture of these?

Here you go. I just took one comparing my cobra arctic to the recent Indigo I just got. You can clearly see the melted edges that would pose as a huge problem on paint.

CIMG5822.jpg
 
Here you go. I just took one comparing my cobra arctic to the recent Indigo I just got. You can clearly see the melted edges that would pose as a huge problem on paint.

CIMG5822.jpg

Wow no way I would let those touch my paint...
 
Yeah me either-wonder if the design and quality control managers at Cobra even know anything about buffing paint-from this example they clearly have no idea.
 
Here you go. I just took one comparing my cobra arctic to the recent Indigo I just got. You can clearly see the melted edges that would pose as a huge problem on paint.

CIMG5822.jpg

Thank you for posting this picture, as unfortunately I no longer have the towels on hand as I gave them to my mom (she loves cleaning the house with MF's dampened in water). These are the exact way my towels are/were.

if you cut the edge's off the towels will completely come apart over time. which in the first place you should not have to do after reading the product description on the website.

and just FYI, i the new white edgeless towels are the same way now as well. hot wire cut. so if you have the older design with the true seamless edge, cherish them. lol .

I hope by making this thread I can help AG understand that this is unacceptable. and again, I'm not looking for a replacement. I am now buying my MF from other vendors.

also to add, AG needs to update all there microfiber descriptions. all the new towels are 75/25. they are no longer 70/30 like the description says (although thats not a real issue, just wrong description)

the only available 70/30 towels are the miracle towel and the indigo.

the cobra 600(now 75/25), the HD guzzler(now 80/20) and the arctic edgless(now 75/25) are no longer 70/30 like described.

can I really have been the only person to notice this upon inspection ?
 
Yeah me either-wonder if the design and quality control managers at Cobra even know anything about buffing paint-from this example they clearly have no idea.

all microfiber towels are sourced from other countries. They are usually already pre-designed and a vendor will usually choose from the order catalog which ones they want to import. at most, they could request the color imo.

when you shop around for MF as much as I have , you will notice a trend that there are basically only a limited design that look to all be sourced from the same manufacturers.
 
The first thing that came to mind when I read this is the world is celebrating the arrival of the New Year, it's time to celebrate and these guys are talking about microfiber towels!

And at the same time you're posting on the same thread :laughing:
 
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