OCW first time. I botched the job!

Shakabruddah808

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I recently received OCW in my latest AG order and was eager to try it out, and to see how it'll "play" with BFWD. Washed with ONR, totally dried and proceeded to apply OCW. And wouldn't you know it, only I would find a way to botch it. I broke two rules as it pertains to the SUCCESSFUL application of OCW.

First, I WAAAY over-applied it. Two, the sun peeked out from the clouds for only a minute or so. But when your car is dark blue metallic, that's enough to heat the panels up real quick and I ended up baking the OCW on. Now the roof of my car is covered with dark streaks and splotches. Dumb, dumb, dumb! :doh:

Underlying LSP is two layers of BFWD. I shook bottle of OCW well, for over a minute.

I "tried" to fix things, first by lightly spraying affected panels with ONR at QD strength and buffing off. No luck. Then I lightly sprayed with OCW and wiping off. Marginally better luck. I did not want to do any hard buffing, and thus add scratches.

My previous LSP was Eagle One Nano Spray Wax. It's a very forgiving product, mainly because it's solvent based. If applied too heavily, and it dries, simply spray, wipe, and buff. No problem. OCW is an entirely different animal, and will not tolerate end user mistakes very well. Heck, I'm probably the only one here who managed to screw it up!

Next time I'll do things the right way and work in small sections. Lightly spritz working area, wipe in, and immediately buff off with a separate MF. Lesson learned.


But on the positive side, when I did figure out how to properly apply OCW to the rest of my car, I got amazing results. Did Before and After comparisons on front and back doors, and there was a noticeable difference. Applied first to front door and compared to recently BFWD'd back door. I noticed an increase in gloss and brightening of color immediately.

BFWD tends to darken the colors, ( from what I've experienced on my car....others may find it different ) and will slightly mute the metallic flakes in the shade, but will allow full 'pop' when viewed in direct sunlight. OCW had slightly different characteristics. Because of the 'lightening', I could see more of the flakes in the shade. Pretty impressive.

I'm not going to play the blaming game and blame OCW. It's a simple product to use and only a fool like me could find a way of messin' it up. I'm not going to give up on OCW. All of the blame I place fully upon myself.

Message to other forum members. If you've never tried OCW, don't do what I did. Don't let my mistake discourage you from buying and using it. Thin is in, but thinner is a winner.
 
808, I agree.
Thanks to SwanicYouths threads and posts, I no longer deal with the streaking.
According to Chris@Optimum , a quick wipedown with MF moistened with water will do the trick...I went the light claying/ONR route.

Also according to Chris, hot panels allow the polymers to bond quickly and build up on themselves during the application. Therefore, I never spray directly on the panel, rather 8-10 mists on a cotton lsp towel to apply, and 1 cotton lsp buffing towel. With this method (1/2 ounce per car) it will take me eons to finish the gallon - I've been giving it away.
The streaks that I witnessed were only visible in the dew on the vehicle.
Notice no streaks in the dew:

 
Vegas transplant, do u find cotton towels work better than microfiber for OCW?
 
No sir. I think they work the same.
I am idiosyncratic in my use of deep pile (loop) 100% cotton lsp towels...MF for everthing else.
Same thing for polishing aluminum, especially billet.
 
Agree with the spraying the towel rather than the panel. Also for me thin is in when it comes to the towel. I apply and remove with a Sonus (or similar) polishing towel.
 
No sir. I think they work the same.
I am idiosyncratic in my use of deep pile (loop) 100% cotton lsp towels...MF for everthing else.
Same thing for polishing aluminum, especially billet.

Ok thanks that's actually not a bad idea. I got a few blonde zaino towels that aren't seeing much use lately so might dedicate those to spray waxes.

Oh and great tip for spraying directly on the towel. Tried it out tonight and it was so much easier this way.
 
:props:

The tips were found here on the AGO forums.
I came here to up my game.


Agree with the spraying the towel rather than the panel. Also for me thin is in when it comes to the towel. I apply and remove with a Sonus (or similar) polishing towel.

Howdy P.G. neighbor !

I have 2 Sonus towels that were free gifts in an order that sit around gathering dust...seems they're just too good to use...lol
 
:props:

The tips were found here on the AGO forums.
I came here to up my game.




Howdy P.G. neighbor !

I have 2 Sonus towels that were free gifts in an order that sit around gathering dust...seems they're just too good to use...lol

Thanks, I used to work in PG county.
Which Sonus towels do you have? The green polishing towels are the only ones I've used.
 
Thanks, I used to work in PG county.
Which Sonus towels do you have? The green polishing towels are the only ones I've used.

Seems that I got the towns mixed up. This one is close by.

Forest Heights, MD - Official Website

These towels.
VVV
dollar_stores.jpg
 
Try and apply OCW to a thick towel, then wipe. Goes on way thinner and cleaner. Repeat applications to improve gloss/thickness.
 
Ok thanks that's actually not a bad idea. I got a few blonde zaino towels that aren't seeing much use lately so might dedicate those to spray waxes.

Oh and great tip for spraying directly on the towel. Tried it out tonight and it was so much easier this way.

I got a few cheapie, thin Viking MF's from O'Reily's. I used them to apply spray wax on my previous car and it worked out pretty good. Guess I'll be going back to that.

I like that! Might even borrow it in the future...


:xyxthumbs:

I get first dibs! At first I thought of "Thinner, thinner, chicken dinner", but it just didn't have the same ring.

808, I agree.
Thanks to SwanicYouths threads and posts, I no longer deal with the streaking.
According to Chris@Optimum , a quick wipedown with MF moistened with water will do the trick...I went the light claying/ONR route.

Also according to Chris, hot panels allow the polymers to bond quickly and build up on themselves during the application. Therefore, I never spray directly on the panel, rather 8-10 mists on a cotton lsp towel to apply, and 1 cotton lsp buffing towel. With this method (1/2 ounce per car) it will take me eons to finish the gallon - I've been giving it away.
The streaks that I witnessed were only visible in the dew on the vehicle.
Notice no streaks in the dew:


Wow, tight beading! It's been raining off and on today, and I got pretty much the same results. When applied correctly, ain't OCW an awesome product?
 
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