Blackfire and Wolfgang coatings weather/temp range

Ancient1

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I have looked in posts and all the info I could find on these two products and all I could find is a single post saying that uber should be applied above 60f and nothing on BF CC. What I would like to know is the range of temps for application and for curing. I am surprised that neither came with such information.

I did my daughters car and actually measured the panel temps which ran from 61 to 71 and had similar weather for my brothers truck both of which I did with the Blackfire CC.

After that I started on my own car but by the time (less than a week) I came to coat it the weather turned and temps have dropped about 30 degrees.
My brothers condo has underground parking that is kept at 72 so I used that to coat my car with the uber. The thing that concerns me is it was only able to stay in there for 1-1.5 hr before I went out in 30 degree weather with 25 mph winds and gusts to 50.

I just wonder if that had any effect on the longevity of the coating even tho it isn't that big of deal since I probably won't have the car more than a few months but do wonder about the one or two I still have to do. I would what the safe temps are for application and both short term and long term curring on both products. I would li8ke to use the uber on both but if the BF CC is more resistant to the temps that could change my mind.

One of the cars is my 95 Roadmaster estate and would like to know if the BF CC would work on my vinyl woodgrain.
 
I will try to answer the best I can.

I have used all of the coatings offered by PBMG. Being here in Florida most of the year it's pretty hot and humid out. Depending on how the product flashes and wipes off on the first panel I will adjust the time I let the products flash before wipe off.

Recently I have coated 2 cars with the Wolfgang Uber outside in the sun. The temp was about 80deg and I worked in smaller areas without issues. As far as cold weather goes I cannot comment.

BF CC is a little more tricky especially with the high humidity down here. Again I just worked in smaller areas and adjusted my flash time as needed. Hopefully this helps a bit.
 
I don't know about the low end of the temp spectrum, but 90F temps with 80%+ humidity made the Blackfire product very difficult to apply. Fortunately, the results were fantastic.
 
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