Liquid or paste Souveran for silver?

Black & Red?

I bought this kit last year :

Pinnacle - Wolfgang Souveran Kit

From what I am reading in this thread, it sounds like it would be pretty good for silver cars...but in the description of the kit, it says works best on Black and Red cars. I bought the kit to use on some collector cars (77 Trans AM, 63 T-Bird and an 05 Mustang) which are red, white and black respectively. The results are best on the black and red vehicles...but would there be a better kit for white and even silver vehicles?

Sorry if this is redundant or repetitive. Just currious if this is the best kit for lighter colors.

Thanks!
 
AaronO said:
I bought this kit last year :

Pinnacle - Wolfgang Souveran Kit

From what I am reading in this thread, it sounds like it would be pretty good for silver cars...but in the description of the kit, it says works best on Black and Red cars. I bought the kit to use on some collector cars (77 Trans AM, 63 T-Bird and an 05 Mustang) which are red, white and black respectively. The results are best on the black and red vehicles...but would there be a better kit for white and even silver vehicles?

Sorry if this is redundant or repetitive. Just currious if this is the best kit for lighter colors.

Thanks!


Good question... i often thought that the liquid soveruan was better for light cars, but look at killr's wheels and see what the paste does for silver, im using the paste........;) that kit you have is a good one for any color/clearcoat i'd say.......
 
i sum up souveran like this-

It's good on any color, but best on darks.
 
Neothin said:
i sum up souveran paste like this-

It's good on any color, but best on darks.


:iagree: :iagree:


you can get away with Paste Glaz, Sig Series, or Sig Series II on light colored metallics however. No quite Souveran, but aint to shabby :applause:
 
on solid light colors (basically white) i actually prefer paste glaz over anything else, but alas, it's discontinued and my jar was finished long ago :(
 
Neothin said:
on solid light colors (basically white) i actually prefer paste glaz over anything else, but alas, it's discontinued and my jar was finished long ago :(


Thats why to my understanding pinnacle came out with the liquid wax when glaz was discontinued
more polymers added to the liquid for lighter colors..........
 
Neothin said:
on solid light colors (basically white) i actually prefer paste glaz over anything else, but alas, it's discontinued and my jar was finished long ago :(
I like to use Glaze's. Can you name just a few.
I'm guessing CK VMG is not one of the Glazes your speaking of?

1 more question. can you apply sealants over glaze?
 
Paste Glaz was a wax offered via Pinnacle and was designed for lighter colors and was offered side by side with Souveran Paste. Over the years they brought out Pinnacle Souveran Liquid with increased polymers and durability, and once Sig Series was designed to enhance metallics it was basically lost. Considering VOC regulations ushered in Sig Series II, I suspect Paste Glaz would have also been discontinued or needing to be revamped at a cost to high given the competing products within the line.

I have a brand new, never used tub .... of Paste Glaz .... highest bidder, Ebay style ?????????
 
CK's VM is a glaze with some polishing ability
CK Red Moose Machine Glaze
Meguiar's #7, #3 (i think?)
Meguiar's deep crystal step 2
xmt carnauba finishing glaze

and the list goes on...

you can apply a sealant over a glaze
BUT!
don't expect the normal durability out of it.

sealants like to bond to clean surfaces, not oils and fillers like those found in glazes.
 
joe.p said:
I like to use Glaze's. Can you name just a few.
I'm guessing CK VMG is not one of the Glazes your speaking of?

1 more question. can you apply sealants over glaze?



Sealants over glaze is a NO NO from what i understand.....something about the bonding process is the issue..... :)
 
BILL said:
Sealants over glaze is a NO NO from what i understand.....something about the bonding process is the issue..... :)

So if I were going to use a machine glaze, maybe just follow it with a carnuba (like #26 MG)?
Lots of great info here, thanks.
 
Shayne said:
So if I were going to use a machine glaze, maybe just follow it with a carnuba (like #26 MG)?
Lots of great info here, thanks.

Sure ...that'll do it nicely......i'd also consider souveran ;)
 
Thanks for all the responses everyone!!
 
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