Legacykid
New member
- Sep 4, 2013
- 451
- 0
- Thread starter
- #21
I'm going to take an anecdotal approach. There is a reason body shops don't like any silicone nearby. If it gets in the air, it will find its way through the shop, on to panels and cause problems. My guess is that some of the reload you spayed got airborne and settled on the horizontal panels.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I think this is the likely explanation. It's no different than when you fry food in your kitchen. Oil droplets get airborne and go everywhere. If you don't clean often, you'll find a coating of oil over items far from the stove. I know this because I don't clean my kitchen often enough.![]()
This is what I was thinking, but still seems strange that it would get all over and "apply/adhere" so well. I could take a picture of the bottle of reload Ive done two cars and used it very very sparingly.
My first thought/reaction to reading the comments and seeing the pictures was that the product moved around along with the water when it was sprayed off. I was thinking Hydro2...of course knowing he didn't use that, rather, that the water picked up some residual something and found its way all over the car. That's just a thought, but it would be interesting to see if the coating and reload applied to only the hood of another car would yield the same results on the windows? You may have discovered another way to use, and thus save on product use. Sounds crazy I know, but that's what I was thinking.
Interesting thinking.