All this talk is speculation until a side by side comparison is done with HD speed and Carpro Essence. Until we see that, any new product with this much hype has to prove itself next to the others.
Actually it doesn't because it's not in the came category as the others. It's NOT meant for HEAVY CORRECTION. It's meant for very LIGHT CORRECTION with emphasis on the word LIGHT.
I think I spelled it out pretty well in my first post. :dunno:
We already know the jeweling wax has neither the cut nor the protection of the other two I mentioned. So that means all it has left to offer is the "look".
That's correct and that's one of the things that separates it from "the others".
So unless this stuff looks ridiculously awesome... It's not a big deal.
looks ridiculously awesome
Did you see this?
McKee's 37 = Winner BEST PAINT!
Just received an e-mail from Eric Vollmer at M&M Racing who was at the World of Wheels Car Show in Chicago this last weekend.
Eric let us know that 1940 Ford Coupe buffed out and detailed by our Competition Ready Team won BEST PAINT! Plus 3 more awards.
Award #1 = Best Paint
Award #2 = Best in class
Award #3 = Billet Specialties Top 20
Award #4 = Best display
Here it is on display at the show - photo courtesy of StephenK
Here's some pictures I took of the 1940 Ford Coupe immediately after the Competition Ready Team finished detailing, prepping and machine polishing.
Congratulations to all the guys on the team that made the magic happen and congratulations to Bob McKee and his new line of products including the products used to create the finish that won BEST PAINT!
On Autogeek.com
McKee's 37 Fast Compound - 16 oz
McKee's 37 Fast Polish - 16 oz
McKee's 37 Jeweling Wax - 16 oz
:dblthumb2: :dblthumb2: :dblthumb2:
Also, wax is not preferred over sealants or coatings in this day and age for non show cars...
Well that's an opinion. What I've seen is non show cars, I guess that means DAILY DRIVERS - even when coated the coating gets a dirt stain.
From my first post...
Mike Phillips said:
Perfect for regular maintenance of daily drivers
Vehicles that are used as daily drivers are exposed to all sorts of attack to the exterior finish. This is especially true for vehicles in geographical areas where it rains.
When it rains, the cars driving in front of your car spray water from the road onto your car. The water spray contains oily fluids dripped onto the road by the hundreds and even thousands of cars that drive over the road each day. This oily water spray also contain dirt and the effect is this oily, dirty water accumulates to form road film on your car's paint.
A jeweling wax is powerful enough to remove road film to restore a clean paint surface without removing measurable amounts of paint like compounds, medium cut polishes and medium cleaning cleaner/waxes or AIO's.
and HD speed is a sealant and Essence is a coating.
Everybody relax.
For the record....
In my entire life in the car detailing world I've
never met another educated, seasoned professional detailer that has used a cleaner/wax as their FINAL LSP for a show car the day before the car is put on display.
Never.
Like I wrote already... cleaner/waxes are great. Hell I teach how to use a cleaner/wax in my 3-day classes when I cover Production Detailing as a way to make money.
This year at Mobile Tech Expo I taught
TWO classes on how to use a one-step cleaner/wax, one with the FLEX 3401 and one with the RUPES BigFoot 15 and 21. After my RUPES class Jason Rose took the time to walk over and tell me my presentation on how to use the RUPES orbital polishers with one-step cleaner waxes was great.
The big picture is this...
A product like McKee's 37 while offering the same three things all cleaner/waxes and AIO's offer, that is,
- Cleans
- Polishes
- Protects
it's the fact that it's NOT heavy on the cleaning side and but super on the polishing and shining side that makes it different enough that it shouldn't be lumped into the same category as all the rest of the cleaner/waxes on the market.
Heck
Nu Finish is a one-step cleaner/wax and it certainly doesn't create the deep, wet shine like you see on the 1940 Ford Coupe.
:dblthumb2: