Mike,
related to your final wipe how-to thread, I do the same with a dedicated final wipe towel, and that's where I expect to feel the post-wax slickness where the towel glides over the paint with no friction.
Recently I had several bird poop bombs to clean off my hood, and I waxed again afterwards, except I tried a different wax than what I had used about 2 months prior. I did this in the morning on a "cold" car and in a shaded garage.
This was the first time I can recall where I did not get the post-wax slickness. It looked great, and it wasn't grabby or anything, but it didn't have quite the frictionless slickness I expect. I have used this wax on another car and it did have the slickness so it's not a bad batch of wax.
Any reason you can think of why the final wipe would not be super slick? Only thing I can think of is some strange interaction with the previous wax but I've changed waxes many times over my life and have never had this happen.
thanks
related to your final wipe how-to thread, I do the same with a dedicated final wipe towel, and that's where I expect to feel the post-wax slickness where the towel glides over the paint with no friction.
Recently I had several bird poop bombs to clean off my hood, and I waxed again afterwards, except I tried a different wax than what I had used about 2 months prior. I did this in the morning on a "cold" car and in a shaded garage.
This was the first time I can recall where I did not get the post-wax slickness. It looked great, and it wasn't grabby or anything, but it didn't have quite the frictionless slickness I expect. I have used this wax on another car and it did have the slickness so it's not a bad batch of wax.
Any reason you can think of why the final wipe would not be super slick? Only thing I can think of is some strange interaction with the previous wax but I've changed waxes many times over my life and have never had this happen.
thanks