Chris Thomas
Optimum Guru
- Dec 21, 2007
- 1,824
- 0
How do you do paint/chip repair with a permanent coating on the paint?
The same instructions apply as if you had no coating with the exception of needing to scuff or abrade the coating that will have the touch up paint applied.
Yes, let me rephrase: How do you remove permanent coating to do paint/chip repair?
To remove the coating, you just abrade it, just like OEM clear. You do not need to fully remove it in order for another product to adhere, only to scuff it.
The surface area (minus the bottom since we don't want to coat that) of a 20 foot shipping container is roughly 600 square feet. a 2 micron film over that area is about 115 millilitres (cc) or just under 4 fluid oz.
Plus whatever evaporates upon application. No idea what the solvent ratio is for automotive paints or the products in question but it seems like it should be able to cover an average car with 20 cc.
Actually you can coat the average sized car with 10cc easily.
so by saying "There's no mistake" you are still maintaining that all coatings based on nanotechnology are the same? Because that's the only thing being said here. :dunno:
would also be very fascinated to see your data on thickness of film build as I don't see how 5ml of resin can build 2 microns of film. it just doesn't compute. Feed back please
Rob, I feel like you may need to re read your posts and recondsider whether this is the appropriate way to represent your company. IMO, you should tell the public about the merits your product has instead of trying to poke holes in my statements regarding my product.
I never said that coatings based on nanotechnology are the same, what I said is that they are not coatings like paint is a coating. They are more accurately: extended life sealants. You have conceeded this by the durability claims and attribute fall off YOU stated about your own product. Even the organic part of the hybrid that sounds so advanced will likely be non existant after exposure to certain chemicals, so it's little more than a built in topper.
Regarding OptiCoat thickness: We have two paint coatings OptiCoat and OptiCoat 2.0. OptiCoat (aka OptiGuard, OptiCoat Pro) is the product I was referencing in my first post. OptiCoat 2.0 is our consumer version and is less concentrated, but will still achieve a film thickness of .5 to 1 um easily...and while a thicker coating is not required to yield the benefits of the coating, it can easily be achieved by layering if so desired. I'm actually surprised that 30 ml (3x the amount of OptiCoat needed) of C1 only yields a .02 um thickness as that's no better than conventional products.
I think it's best to inform our customers of the merits of our products instead of making it an Optimum vs. GTechniq thing. They can decide if they want permanent or extended life...they can decide if they want to make one careful trip around the car or three quick ones...they can decide if they want to spend $69 for enough OptiCoat 2.0 to treat two vehicles or whatever your MSRP is for your repective "coatings".