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What are the dilution ratios on the bottle of Duragloss APC?
Thanks
1:10
Or
1:20
Reading this thread reminds me of my failure to pay attention to chemistry lessons at school. So far, the only bit I understood was the mention of residue which I do think needs more discussions, plus the role of dwell time
Reading this thread reminds me of my failure to pay attention to chemistry lessons at school. So far, the only bit I understood was the mention of residue which I do think needs more discussions, plus the role of dwell time
Dwell time - think of chemicals as little molecular machines. You put them onto the dirt and they buzz around cleaning. Like a machine, it takes time for them to actually work their way through the dirt. As such, you need an adequate contact time to do the cleaning. Of course, you can often get away with less time if you are going to be scrubbing/wiping/doing mechanical work.
Doesn't this then support using a foam cannon or foam gun where the soap/foam clings to the paint to help reduce the amount of scrubbing?
How do you tell if a foam is stable?That is the idea behind snowfoam - you get longer contact, the dirt is softer and can be more easily removed with a pressure washer. The original idea was to get rid of that dirt before you touch the surface, I realise that many use it without the pressure washer and I do think that this negates a lot of the theoretical benefit. Snowfoam also tends to be very mild because the foam is much more dilute than you would realise - it may be 100:1 going through a lance, but that is the liquid. In reality, only a small part is in contact with the surface because much is trapped in the foam (think of there being a dilution in water AND air). That is also one of the reasons that an excessively stable foam is bad - the foam should break down and replenish the surface with fresh product. If the foam is really stable, most of the product resides in the foam and never gets anywhere near the surface (so it is totally wasted when you then rinse it down the drain).
How do you tell if a foam is stable?
Spray it on and see if it sticks like shaving foam (and clogs the drains after rinsed!) or whether it breaks down and flows off over a few minutes. It is a fine balance, in my view it should go on pretty thick but should star running off within a couple of minutes, give it 10 mins and it should mostly be gone. Some products out there fail because they are obsessed with the foam lasting absolutely ages, others fail because they run off too fast.
Spray it on and see if it sticks like shaving foam (and clogs the drains after rinsed!) or whether it breaks down and flows off over a few minutes. It is a fine balance, in my view it should go on pretty thick but should star running off within a couple of minutes, give it 10 mins and it should mostly be gone. Some products out there fail because they are obsessed with the foam lasting absolutely ages, others fail because they run off too fast.