NEW MC KEES sio2 WASH

What does the sio2 stand for? I thought it would be silicone dioxide which would help protect the vehicle.
 
Weird none of these products ever have a beta...

Some products we advertise BETA samples on the forum, while others we do not. Nowadays, we mostly advertise BETA samples on our Facebook discussion group, where we attract the cream of the crop (meaning people that are genuinely interested in detailing and our product line). Sio2 Auto Wash has been cooking in the oven for quite some time. Back in May I invited FrankS, a reputable forum member and world-class detailer that posts helpful, informative content on the forum, to test out one of the BETA versions during Cars & Coffee. The formula wasn't quite there yet, so we had to make some changes.

I looked through your posting history Jeff and it appears that your intentions on this forum are questionable, especially when it's a thread that pertains to McKee's 37.

In my experience, people join and post on a discussion forum for 1 of 3 reasons.

1. To learn.
2. To help others.
3. To cause trouble.

What's your reason for being here?

If you genuinely have good intentions, and your questions are not intended to be rhetorical and sarcastic, I would invite you to give me a call. I would be happy to answer any question you have in detail.

:)
 
Depending on temp is your answer. I would love to see this work at 2pm on a hot sunny day where the metal is at 150 degrees and no streaks.This is a wash solution with little silica in it.Its not a wash to prevent spotting.

Maybe you missed the thread I made last week.

Actually that is one of the main characteristics of this soap is to prevent spotting.

I washed a dark blue Porsche 911 in 90+ degrees around lunchtime with no clouds/shade anywhere in sight. I let the soap solution dry on the paint, I rinsed and dried as normal with no streaks/water marks.

check out the thread when you get a chance, A video on the 911 will be coming out shortly, in the process of editing.

https://www.autogeekonline.net/foru...e-s-37-sio2-auto-wash-create-candy-gloss.html
 
Then the threads when people have problems or questions they seem to be overlooked


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Hi Matt,

Since January 2011 I've made 7,077 posts (7,078 including this one ;) ). A lot of which I would consider to be helping people that have questions. I'm not always able to reply the same day, but overall I'm pretty good at addressing any threads pertaining to my brand. If a question is time sensitive, most people will pick up the phone and call me.

I guarantee I can solve any issue that any person has with my product line. Nobody has ever hung up the phone unsatisfied with my response to their question.

Understand fully but I want more feedback with good results.The initial outlay of 50.00 on a new product without any feedback from a couple of guys isn't enough to persuade me to buy it now.Im really not in the maintenance sector washing cars for me its not worth my time.However I would consider buying it for personal use.Never buy a product that just introduced. Into the market its all hype in the beginning and Im sure you know that.mckees has great stuff but I wait for others to dive in and give us reviews.

Jeff,

Next time you stop by the shop I'll give you a full size bottle, on the house, for you to evaluate on your personal vehicles. I agree that for someone like yourself that details for a living, $50 a gallon wouldn't make the most sense to use on every vehicle you wash. I would save it for the clients with a coated vehicle, that pay you big bucks to come out and perform a maintenance wash.

Isewake said:
What does the sio2 stand for? I thought it would be silicone dioxide which would help protect the vehicle.

Think of Sio2 Auto Wash as a wash and wax, but instead of wax it contains Sio2. It works extremely well to maintain a vehicle that's coated using our Paint Coating, or our Hydro Blue. It enhances gloss, promotes water sheeting (making the vehicle easier to dry), and helps maintain the gloss and hydrophobic characteristics of your coating. It's also very friendly in direct sun; it can dry on the paint without causing any issues.
 
All I can say that with the products Nick has come up with recently it has made my maintaining of our cars a lot easier and simple. I have become a fan of McKees 37 products.

Any concerns or questions Nick has taken time to answer them for me :)
 
Hi Matt,

Since January 2011 I've made 7,077 posts (7,078 including this one ;) ). A lot of which I would consider to be helping people that have questions. I'm not always able to reply the same day, but overall I'm pretty good at addressing any threads pertaining to my brand. If a question is time sensitive, most people will pick up the phone and call me.

I guarantee I can solve any issue that any person has with my product line. Nobody has ever hung up the phone unsatisfied with my response to their question.

:laughing:

Jeff,

Next time you stop by the shop I'll give you a full size bottle, on the house, for you to evaluate on your personal vehicles. I agree that for someone like yourself that details for a living, $50 a gallon wouldn't make the most sense to use on every vehicle you wash. I would save it for the clients with a coated vehicle, that pay you big bucks to come out and perform a maintenance wash.



Think of Sio2 Auto Wash as a wash and wax, but instead of wax it contains Sio2. It works extremely well to maintain a vehicle that's coated using our Paint Coating, or our Hydro Blue. It enhances gloss, promotes water sheeting (making the vehicle easier to dry), and helps maintain the gloss and hydrophobic characteristics of your coating. It's also very friendly in direct sun; it can dry on the paint without causing any issues.


Hey Nick,

How do I get on the free SIO2 wash, so I can evaluate it?;)
 
I've been using Hydro Blue on both of my DD recently. After application of HB, I go until the cars need washing. I then either do a 2B wash or if it's just real light dirt, I'll do a waterless wash. I've noticed after I do a wash, my hydro blue no longer beads and sheds water as well after it's been wiped by hand. If I instead start using this as a maintenance wash, will the HB maintain it's beading properties better? Or does this wash still require reapplication of HB afterwards too?

What car wash soap or waterless solution are you using? Any chance they're leaving their own gloss enhancers or wax that would alter the Hydro Blue? I only ask because it seems to be a common thing that comes up in coating threads.
 
Hi Matt,

Since January 2011 I've made 7,077 posts (7,078 including this one ;) ). A lot of which I would consider to be helping people that have questions. I'm not always able to reply the same day, but overall I'm pretty good at addressing any threads pertaining to my brand. If a question is time sensitive, most people will pick up the phone and call me.

I guarantee I can solve any issue that any person has with my product line. Nobody has ever hung up the phone unsatisfied with my response to their question.



Jeff,

Next time you stop by the shop I'll give you a full size bottle, on the house, for you to evaluate on your personal vehicles. I agree that for someone like yourself that details for a living, $50 a gallon wouldn't make the most sense to use on every vehicle you wash. I would save it for the clients with a coated vehicle, that pay you big bucks to come out and perform a maintenance wash.



Think of Sio2 Auto Wash as a wash and wax, but instead of wax it contains Sio2. It works extremely well to maintain a vehicle that's coated using our Paint Coating, or our Hydro Blue. It enhances gloss, promotes water sheeting (making the vehicle easier to dry), and helps maintain the gloss and hydrophobic characteristics of your coating. It's also very friendly in direct sun; it can dry on the paint without causing any issues.

I reason I asked is because it seems like it has silicone dioxide in it but on the product page, it states no silicone. Seems to me that it's similar to Gyeon Bathe+ which I like.
 
What does the sio2 stand for? I thought it would be silicone dioxide which would help protect the vehicle.

The documentation page ( McKee's 37 Sio2 Auto Wash 128 oz. ) says silicon dioxide. Technically, it should be spelled "SiO2" and furthermore the "2" should be subscripted but this version of vBulletin does not support subscripted or superscripted numeric fonts. Silicon dioxide is also referred to as "silica" and is the principal component in glass. I am a little surprised that the McKee's chemists did not catch this spelling mistake, though.
 
Hey Nick,

How do I get on the free SIO2 wash, so I can evaluate it?;)

Once you have a history of posting well-documented reviews on the forum you'll automatically be considered! :xyxthumbs:

The documentation page ( McKee's 37 Sio2 Auto Wash 128 oz. ) says silicon dioxide. Technically, it should be spelled "SiO2" and furthermore the "2" should be subscripted but this version of vBulletin does not support subscripted or superscripted numeric fonts. Silicon dioxide is also referred to as "silica" and is the principal component in glass. I am a little surprised that the McKee's chemists did not catch this spelling mistake, though.

Good catch. Our chemists do not write the web copy for the Autogeek site, though. ;)

I'll let Autogeek know so they can update their website copy. :props:
 
Does this leave any real protection behind on a non-coated car? Or is it like car wash with wax that is mostly gloss enhancers and won't protect you from squat.
 
Once you have a history of posting well-documented reviews on the forum you'll automatically be considered! :xyxthumbs:



Good catch. Our chemists do not write the web copy for the Autogeek site, though. ;)

I'll let Autogeek know so they can update their website copy. :props:

Thanks. I get trolled sometimes for nitpicking technicalities. In this case, I was trying to figure out what the heck is "Sio" and assumed that "Sio2" was "Sio II" and an upgrade from "Sio I" because branding folks think that II is better than I. So, in this case "silicon dioxide" is mainly referring to "quartz" in context.
 
Never out to hurt mckees .Great product line the point Im making is I don't like to buy new products without reviews.Trust me I know all about the game with new products.Ive Nearly went broke creating my coating that snow does not adhere to metal. I had to have numerous labs sign off so I could license this out.Your line is limited but good.But with all the hype and saturation I may buy but want reviews first that's what this forum is for.I see disparaging comments all the time about inferior products so I don't know why my name was brought up for my own personal opinion. Ive helped numerous people on this forum and even had forum members want to pay me to train them.At the end of the day mckees is a great line and have all the polishes and compounds and interior products. So I would never be out to hurt or cause trouble.
 
I looked through your posting history Jeff and it appears that your intentions on this forum are questionable, especially when it's a thread that pertains to McKee's 37.


:)

I come here for the 24/7 mckee's ads by people who only do mckee's reviews....

My intentions arnt to come here to make money, thats for sure.

Ive come here after following mike from MOL.

Ive been on autopia since like 05 or 06, back when DavidB made a post about relabeled products that got lots of attention....
 
I don't know if you remember nick that 2 months ago I approached you on a 1500.00 initial order to sell in my store and your company declined.So if I thought your products weren't good that conversation would of never taken place.
 
Never out to hurt mckees .Great product line the point Im making is I don't like to buy new products without reviews.Trust me I know all about the game with new products.Ive Nearly went broke creating my coating that snow does not adhere to metal. I had to have numerous labs sign off so I could license this out.Your line is limited but good.But with all the hype and saturation I may buy but want reviews first that's what this forum is for.I see disparaging comments all the time about inferior products so I don't know why my name was brought up for my own personal opinion. Ive helped numerous people on this forum and even had forum members want to pay me to train them.At the end of the day mckees is a great line and have all the polishes and compounds and interior products. So I would never be out to hurt or cause trouble.

You can't win for losing....or is it you can't lose for winning? In a public forum this size we are all bound to upset someone with negative sentiment if we choose to go negative or neutral. The only two product lines I can think of where going negative scores fanboy points is Chemical Guys and Kirkland. All the others get a free pass. I have several McKee's products, my favorite being 360. I'm trying Hydro Blue because one of our vehicles is set-and-forget and I was looking for a product that saves labor and time. I try to buy gallons whenever possible to save having to reorder. I am stuck with some gallons of products that will probably never get used up because I've found better products (i.e. CG V07 which I still like but I found Optimum products and I like them much more). McKee's produces fine products but there is a lot of competition. This forum's objectives are biased towards marketing products so negative or neutral sentiment serves no purpose in this context.

With all of the great products available I think all of us are spoiled by an embarrassment of riches. When there are so many great products available in such a competitive space the end result is branding and marketing becomes very important. The only top-tier product line that I can think of that spends little or nothing on product marketing is Collinite, which is a true outlier, surviving solely on reputation, product quality and word-of-mouth. It is an amazing brand that breaks every rule of product marketing. Think of Collinite as the anti-CG. I admire Collinite more than any other brand in this space because of what they have achieved.
 
Totally agree no arguments or negative gets you any where.mckees makes great products. As I said before about buying continual monthly, if I thought mckees was inferior I would of never approached.In any company no matter what there is always gonna be a product displeaser.I don't dislike any company even chemical guys.I think a lot of there line is good value for the money.I actually have my van full of mckees stuff.I buy from 4 different places.So in essence I don't think my post are questionable.How ever I did have some rocky post about a year or 2 ago.But that had nothing to do with any detail retail line.Its all good and I won't be clogging the forum with stuff like this.
 
Totally agree no arguments or negative gets you any where.mckees makes great products. As I said before about buying continual monthly, if I thought mckees was inferior I would of never approached.In any company no matter what there is always gonna be a product displeaser.I don't dislike any company even chemical guys.I think a lot of there line is good value for the money.I actually have my van full of mckees stuff.I buy from 4 different places.So in essence I don't think my post are questionable.How ever I did have some rocky post about a year or 2 ago.But that had nothing to do with any detail retail line.Its all good and I won't be clogging the forum with stuff like this.

Nick was referring to JeffM on the questionable posts. Unless you have two different memberships with the forum(honest statement) then you have nothing to worry about. Nick did offer for you to try the SiO2 Auto Wash for free as well


Sent from my iPhone using Autogeekonline mobile app
 
What car wash soap or waterless solution are you using? Any chance they're leaving their own gloss enhancers or wax that would alter the Hydro Blue? I only ask because it seems to be a common thing that comes up in coating threads.

Mostly ONR at various dilutions. but I do use a bit of Meg's Gold Class shampoo in my bucket washes sometimes.

I've tried just spraying off the dirt, without wiping, but without a pressure washer, it just doesn't get clean without physical contact with the paint. (I use long chenille mf mitts) It's mostly the lower panels that get dirty, while the upper sections of the cars stay clean. It's always these lower panels, that I have to wash by hand, that doesn't bead or shed water as well as the upper panels after a wash. I end up having to reapply Hydro Blue after each wash in order to get uniform beading and good water shedding in these areas again. I really like Hydro Blue, but its not going to be economical for me if I have to reapply it after every wash.
 
Mostly ONR at various dilutions. but I do use a bit of Meg's Gold Class shampoo in my bucket washes sometimes.

I've tried just spraying off the dirt, without wiping, but without a pressure washer, it just doesn't get clean without physical contact with the paint. (I use long chenille mf mitts) It's mostly the lower panels that get dirty, while the upper sections of the cars stay clean. It's always these lower panels, that I have to wash by hand, that doesn't bead or shed water as well as the upper panels after a wash. I end up having to reapply Hydro Blue after each wash in order to get uniform beading and good water shedding in these areas again. I really like Hydro Blue, but its not going to be economical for me if I have to reapply it after every wash.

Road scum splashed from your tires on the side panels is the most challenging. I wish there was a way to quantify this. On my Prius which is near show-car finished and with very fresh 476s the road scum comes off with very easy passes with Meg's shampoo. After a month the beading is still very good but the road scum requires more work to remove. This is why I'm not keen on using beading as a metric to test LSP durability. The surface tension of road scum is zero and the scum seems capable of diffusion on anything short of freshly applied LSP.
 
Back
Top