Desertnate
Well-known member
- Aug 5, 2013
- 6,238
- 291
Four months ago, I applied the M37 paint coating to my wife's daily driver. The application was very easy and the results turned out flawless. I was really happy with how everything turned out...at least until a week or so ago.
Recently we had a day of unseasonably warm weather, so like any good Geek, I broke out the hose and buckets. While washing and rinsing my wife's car I noticed the coating was holding up extremely well on all of the horizontal surfaces (hood/roof) and vertical surfaces in front of the wheels (i.e. front quarter panels, front bumpers, and grill). However, on the vertical side panels where salt and typical winter road grime is sprayed, and to a lesser extent on the rear hatch, there was a very distinct line in water behavior. Above the "spray line" the coating was holding up beautifully and water seemed to almost bounce off the surface. Beading was very tight and sheeting was quite rapid. Below that "spray line"...nothing. At all. In fact, even after washing those areas twice, the water would cling to the surface like you'd suspect from an area with no LSP at all. Even when doing a flood rinse a layer of water stuck to these vertical surfaces.
What made this even more concerning was I immediately followed up by washing my car which wears a 4-month old, single layer of Collinite 845. The water behaved like you'd imagine...glorious beading and very rapid sheeting when flood rinsed. There was no "spay line" on the sides or rear hatch. When clean, the surface behaved as a clean car with a good layer of LSP should.
Our winter has been almost non-existent this year. The roads have only been salted heavily twice and both cars have had almost identical cleanings over that time. This leaves me wondering why a coating, even budget friendly consumer grade, would not hold up better than a quality traditional LSP. With the degradation I'm seeing right now from salt spray, the coating hasn't even lasted 4 months in mild winter conditions. I was hoping to get at least a year of protection as the 2-year claims are probably not realistic. At this point I'm going to end up having to re-coat all lower surfaces on half the car, or polish the whole thing and go with another product.
Was it to much to expect the M37 coating to hold up to typical winter salt conditions?
Recently we had a day of unseasonably warm weather, so like any good Geek, I broke out the hose and buckets. While washing and rinsing my wife's car I noticed the coating was holding up extremely well on all of the horizontal surfaces (hood/roof) and vertical surfaces in front of the wheels (i.e. front quarter panels, front bumpers, and grill). However, on the vertical side panels where salt and typical winter road grime is sprayed, and to a lesser extent on the rear hatch, there was a very distinct line in water behavior. Above the "spray line" the coating was holding up beautifully and water seemed to almost bounce off the surface. Beading was very tight and sheeting was quite rapid. Below that "spray line"...nothing. At all. In fact, even after washing those areas twice, the water would cling to the surface like you'd suspect from an area with no LSP at all. Even when doing a flood rinse a layer of water stuck to these vertical surfaces.
What made this even more concerning was I immediately followed up by washing my car which wears a 4-month old, single layer of Collinite 845. The water behaved like you'd imagine...glorious beading and very rapid sheeting when flood rinsed. There was no "spay line" on the sides or rear hatch. When clean, the surface behaved as a clean car with a good layer of LSP should.
Our winter has been almost non-existent this year. The roads have only been salted heavily twice and both cars have had almost identical cleanings over that time. This leaves me wondering why a coating, even budget friendly consumer grade, would not hold up better than a quality traditional LSP. With the degradation I'm seeing right now from salt spray, the coating hasn't even lasted 4 months in mild winter conditions. I was hoping to get at least a year of protection as the 2-year claims are probably not realistic. At this point I'm going to end up having to re-coat all lower surfaces on half the car, or polish the whole thing and go with another product.
Was it to much to expect the M37 coating to hold up to typical winter salt conditions?