Post Your Beading Shots!!!

I'm glad it's not forgotten because it really is awesome! When I place my next order I'm going to get myself some, love the smell but never see the bronze woman sun tanning when I spray it, smells like sun tan lotion

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Haha, I always told myself and others, it smells like summer!

One of my favorite “traditional” non-ceramic/si02 Spray waxes.
 
I'll add a few from the C8 Corvette I recently coated,


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What do you think? Use this picture for Mouse Pad art?

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Cool car too.... the cockpit is like a one-human enclosure.

You don't really sit in the car and drive it, you melt it into and and become one with it.




:)
 
Get out of here with those Computer Generated beads Mike! Those are way too perfect you ain’t fooling’ me hahaha
 
Also if anyone pays attention... Acuras82's beading shot and mine have basically the same beads lol I think we have the exact same product combo on our paint.
 
This thread is too funny. All I see, and probably many others as well, are a million water spots. Give me a product with chemical/uv protection that leaves paint incredibly smooth and glossy, while also having zero hydrophobic properties. I almost feel guilty these days selling ceramic coating installs
 
This thread is too funny. All I see, and probably many others as well, are a million water spots. Give me a product with chemical/uv protection that leaves paint incredibly smooth and glossy, while also having zero hydrophobic properties. I almost feel guilty these days selling ceramic coating installs

This is what my lsp [sealant] looks like after it rains.

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It could bake dry in the sun the next morning and there wouldn’t be even a slight chance of leaving water spots and if the car happened to be dirty at the time it rained everything would easily wipe away clean.

If an lsp is at risk of leaving water spots in that situation there’s major problems.
 
If an lsp is at risk of leaving water spots in that situation there’s major problems.

You said it, Ric.

That nasty Tropical Storm yesterday left my truck looking awful. (A little rain, 70+mph winds kicking up all kinds of dirt/debris, and all while the sun came back out to bake it on.)

I just did a RW tonight, and bingo. Good as new with zero water spots.
 
I’ve never really experienced any hard water spots or etching before regardless of my LSP.

Unfortunately where I live now has extremely hard water and an automatic sprinkler system. They go off twice a week at 8am and if my car gets hit by them, it makes for a busy day for me taking care of the spots.

If the water is baking on the car for less than an hour or so, I count myself blessed that they’ll easily wash off... if it sits much longer then that, I’m breaking out my polisher, a few pads and an AIO..
 
This is what my lsp [sealant] looks like after it rains.

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It could bake dry in the sun the next morning and there wouldn’t be even a slight chance of leaving water spots and if the car happened to be dirty at the time it rained everything would easily wipe away clean.

If an lsp is at risk of leaving water spots in that situation there’s major problems.


Haha I mean water spots that don't come out after washing are easily the #1 reason for ceramic coating callbacks. Sure, if you wash your car relatively soon the water spots should come right out, but that's not always the case and it's not realistic to expect every customer to baby their coating either.

You can go to the local auto store and buy a $10 product that makes your car bead. I'll never understand the fascination.

The best part is professionals like Mike Phillips will routinely talk about how beading is terrible for your car, yet they'll still hype up products that create beading. Makes no sense to me
 
Haha I mean water spots that don't come out after washing are easily the #1 reason for ceramic coating callbacks. Sure, if you wash your car relatively soon the water spots should come right out, but that's not always the case and it's not realistic to expect every customer to baby their coating either.

You can go to the local auto store and buy a $10 product that makes your car bead. I'll never understand the fascination.

The best part is professionals like Mike Phillips will routinely talk about how beading is terrible for your car, yet they'll still hype up products that create beading. Makes no sense to me

Sounds more like a downfall of ceramic coatings than traditional waxes and sealants, if you ask me.

There’s also plenty of members on this forum with ceramic coatings that haven’t ever had an issue with water spots on their coatings.

I’ve never had water spot issues with polymer sealants that produce tremendous beading, and my car used to sit outside at all times. Yet i get to enjoy the ease of washing and drying a hydrophobic product offers, because they’re not terrible for anyone’s car.


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Is this the logic then, beading for cars that are garaged, because they only get wet when they are being driven, sheeting for cars parked outside, so it runs off while they sit in the rain?

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Is this the logic then, beading for cars that are garaged, because they only get wet when they are being driven, sheeting for cars parked outside, so it runs off while they sit in the rain?

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I would genuinely like someone to put a product that sheets on their hood next to a product that’s extremely hydrophobic and leave their car in a rainstorm.

In my experience it makes no difference, and they both end up with plenty of water on the surface to cause water spots.

I’ve seen plenty of people talk about how great sheeting products are for preventing water spots, but I just call it nonsense. Sprinklers and rain water aren’t flooding your horizontal panels causing the water to slide off.

Even if they were, the edge would go to hydrophobic products because they also sheet better when flooded with water.


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I would genuinely like someone to put a product that sheets on their hood next to a product that’s extremely hydrophobic and leave their car in a rainstorm.

In my experience it makes no difference, and they both end up with plenty of water on the surface to cause water spots.

I’ve seen plenty of people talk about how great sheeting products are for preventing water spots, but I just call it nonsense. Sprinklers and rain water aren’t flooding your horizontal panels causing the water to slide off.

Even if they were, the edge would go to hydrophobic products because they also sheet better when flooded with water.


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In my opinion there's two options. Be one lucky SOB and live in an area without hard water lol, or use a product that's more like a traditional wax. The logic being a traditional wax will take the sacrificial brunt of water spotting and then easily wipe off, taking the water spot etching with it. These chemical resistant sealants you see on YouTube these days are the exact opposite of what you want with hard water. The only way you can remove those from your car are with really harsh chemicals
 
I've got DDJ Iron Gloss on the vinyl wrapped part of my hood, as a test. The vinyl is already mud stained, so it can't make it any worse. I didn't realize it was a sheeting product till after I bought it. First rain since I applied it is due tomorrow.

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These chemical resistant sealants you see on YouTube these days are the exact opposite of what you want with hard water. The only way you can remove those from your car are with really harsh chemicals

These are not sold on AutoGeek, and that's why we do not discuss (or have problems) with them........ ;)
 
Agreed with Finick, give me the most hydrophobic LSP as it tends to work best anytime I, you, we have to touch our paint.

I’d say in very rare cases you’ll end up with spots from rain(think a light drizzle) but almost always it’s just the droplets pulling dirt and dust together into a small round circle which easily washes away. Maybe certain climates or environments could make this a more common occurrence than I’ve ever seen?

Anytime I’ve experienced etched in spots it’s always from sprinklers or hose with hard water drying on surface. I’m sure this would be a problem no matter the LSP and even no LSP.

I’d imagine it’d be tough for a sheeting LSP to combat this issue as it would work similarly to a dead flat no LSP vehicle. It’d be a large flat surface of water with the mineral deposits accumulating at the edges of the panels and possibly creating an overall duller finish across the panel because essentially the whole panel is on big “giant water spot” as opposed to thousands of smaller spots we tend to see.
 
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