Questions About Mike's Favorite Green MF Towels

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A couple questions about these edgeless MF towels ...

1. I assume that the other colors of these towels are exactly the same as the forest green ones ? I already bought a dozen of the green but I want to buy some more but want a different color in order to segregate my towels by use. Can't pass up a 50% off sale on MF's, then again all these sales burn a hole in my pocket. Good thing the PFM's are not included or I'd be in real trouble ...

2. Would these towels be OK to use for car wash media ? We're in an apartment right now until our new house is finished, and no car washing is allowed. Thus I am relegated to the coin-op wash and it's a real hassle hauling two buckets (1 of wash solution, 1 to rinse my wash media) to the car wash. So my plan is to just take 1 bucket of wash solution, soak a dozen of these MF's in it, and eliminate the need for the rinse bucket ... ie. I will not re-use any of the MF's once they are soiled. Sort of a hybrid of the 2B wash crossed with the GDWM, though not rinseless.

TIA,
Rob
 
I dont know if he's talking about the same towels but I bought the grey edgeless polishing cloths a while ago and they were less then stellar to say the least. Very thin, cheap, low quality blend towel. To each his own but i think you should look into the rag company towels in 300gsm to get a true top of the line towel at that weight.
 
1. I assume that the other colors of these towels are exactly the same as the forest green ones ?


No. Nothing like them.

Let me put it like this,

I'm very meticulous when I detail cars, when I teach car detailing and when I make public recommendations for people I don't know, will never meet and have ZERO idea of their knowledge or skill level.

I would never recommend a product for specific type of work, like I do with the Forrest Green eggless towels for PAINT WORK.


I've posted this elsewhere on this forum, here I go again...


When Bobby and Andre were doing some towel testing, I found some of these in the garage. I liked them. I took what I found, washed them and dried them and then started using them when doing paint correction and coating work. I really like them.

I sent an e-mail or verbally told key people at work that I LIKED THEM. A few months down the road I see we have them in stock.

I don't really care if anyone else buys them, I mean I do because we "sell stuff" and that makes our company go. What I mean is I put in an order for 300 towels and now use them in all my classes. In my classes I also SHOWCASE them to my students. I explain a LOT about towels in my classes and we use a LOT of different types of towels in my classes.

For PAINT work -except for chemically stripping - we use these towels. They have a LOW or short pile length. That's a benefit for a number of reasons

They are soft but they are not as limp as some towels, that's a benefit. They are priced right - that's a benefit.


They are not the BEST for wiping off compounds if you're going to polish after compounding. If you're not going to polish after compounding then they are good.

If you are polishing after compounding then a more stout towel makes wiping compound off easier. The Griot's PFMs are good BECAUSE they are stout.


I think we brought in a more stout towel, at least my feedback to Andre was I LIKED the ones he showed me but again, most of the time when I give feedback I never here anything back or what comes from it.

I'lll take a look next week, see if the stout towels I liked for wiping of COMPOUNDS were brought in.

I appreciate you doing you due diligence in researching before purchasing. I like the Forrest Edgeless Green toweled for paint work,

Wiping off polish
Wiping off any type of wax, sealant or AIOs - GREAT for BLACKFIRE ONE STEP
Final wipe or final buff to remove high spots for coatings
Waterless wash
Rinseless wash
Spray detailers

That's off the top of my head.


Hope that helps...

If you get some and don't like them, I'll trade you out for anything you do like and I'l use them.


:)
 
I dont know if he's talking about the same towels but I bought the grey edgeless polishing cloths a while ago and they were less then stellar to say the least.

Very thin, cheap, low quality blend towel. To each his own


I've seen a few of these in the garage and I agree, very thin and for my style of detailing and teaching, they are of no use.

Other's may like these or have a specific use for them, don't be too quick to judge everyone else's unique style or preferences.


:)
 
I think I know where the OP is going. There are green, white, yellow, gray etc towels that have THE SAME EXACT description, but different colors. I bought two different colors assuming they were the same since the description matched all colors.




I've seen a few of these in the garage and I agree, very thin and for my style of detailing and teaching, they are of no use.

Other's may like these or have a specific use for them, don't be too quick to judge everyone else's unique style or preferences.


:)



Mike, are you saying that it's not the case as in they're not the same towel?

If that's the case, I'm pissed honestly.... Same description should yield the the quality towel. TRC does the same with descriptions, it's just a different color...
 
I think I know where the OP is going. There are green, white, yellow, gray etc towels that have THE SAME EXACT description, but different colors. I bought two different colors assuming they were the same since the description matched all colors.

Yes, that is exactly what I was getting at, I should have better explained it like you did. Even when you compare the pics of the different-colored towels, they look like they have the same weave/construction. If they are not all the same in quality vs. the greenies, AG needs to revise the description of the other colors.
 
Well, I just ordered another batch of the "greenies" just in case, and until the confusion is resolved. Guess I will abandon my color-coding plan and just have to keep them segregated.
 
Yeah I'm not sure what I'm going to do. I bought a lot of them like over 100 in thoguht that they were a gold mine since they seemed to be the same as the TRC EL365 towels...
 
Bought TWO 12 packs!

Happy about the price too!

Very rare to see 50 % here on AGO for anything!!

Tom

Plus a few other things as well.
 
Sorry, I should have put the link in my original post, I just thought everyone on the AGF knew what "Mike's favorite green towels" were as he references them in many of his excellent articles. Their rep is well-earned ... they don't look all that special but they work like crazy.
 
Just a follow-up to what I posted previously, see the bold part


When Bobby and Andre were doing some towel testing, I found some of these in the garage. I liked them. I took what I found, washed them and dried them and then started using them when doing paint correction and coating work. I really like them.

I sent an e-mail or verbally told key people at work that I LIKED THEM. A few months down the road I see we have them in stock.

I don't really care if anyone else buys them, I mean I do because we "sell stuff" and that makes our company go.

What I mean is I put in an order for 300 towels and now use them in all my classes.

In my classes I also SHOWCASE them to my students. I explain a LOT about towels in my classes and we use a LOT of different types of towels in my classes.


I'm still unpacking totes from the Texas Roadshow Class. Part of unpacking in doing TONS of laundry.

green_towels_01.JPG




Here's some towels that have been unpacked and then washed and dried and now they are ready for inspecting, folding and putting way. Note the volume of the Forrest Green Edgeless Towels AND this is not all of them!

green_towels_02.JPG





When you actually work on cars instead of sitting in chairs - you go through a LOT of towels. You NEVER see these types of pictures for ANY other detailing class. Never.


10 cars detailed in 2 days! Texas Roadshow Detailing Class!


And all our classes are like this.


:)
 
Just a follow-up to what I posted previously, see.



I'm still unpacking totes from the Texas Roadshow Class. Part of unpacking in doing TONS of laundry.

green_towels_01.JPG




Here's some towels that have been unpacked and then washed and dried and now they are ready for inspecting, folding and putting way. Note the volume of the Forrest Green Edgeless Towels AND this is not all of them!

green_towels_02.JPG





When you actually work on cars instead of sitting in chairs - you go through a LOT of towels. You NEVER see these types of pictures for ANY other detailing class. Never.


10 cars detailed in 2 days! Texas Roadshow Detailing Class!


And all our classes are like this.


:)

That looks like a normal MF laundry day at my house. lol
 
That looks like a normal MF laundry day at my house. lol

Copy that... but just to note - that's not all, that's must some of the towels. I have not finished unpacking the totes. Have not had time and it's a tick messy as there are also lots of dirty pads to get unpacked next, then product and the n tools. I just thought I would back up what I posted about switching my classes over to these Forrest Green towels. We now use the Gold Plush Jr.s for wiping off compounds and moving forward in the process use the green towels.


Then all the tools get wiped down and stored away correctly and all the products, (liquids), get topped-off. The RUPES and Pinnacle compounds being a real pain in the butt to top off as the compounds are thick.


Ugh....


:)
 
That’s always the most dreaded part for me since I’ve been so much mobile work. Unpacking, cleaning towels and pads and then putting it all away. You’re the man Mike!
 
Copy that... but just to note - that's not all, that's must some of the towels. I have not finished unpacking the totes. Have not had time and it's a tick messy as there are also lots of dirty pads to get unpacked next, then product and the n tools. I just thought I would back up what I posted about switching my classes over to these Forrest Green towels. We now use the Gold Plush Jr.s for wiping off compounds and moving forward in the process use the green towels.


Then all the tools get wiped down and stored away correctly and all the products, (liquids), get topped-off. The RUPES and Pinnacle compounds being a real pain in the butt to top off as the compounds are thick.


Ugh....


:)

Mike,
Do you use the same towels for all paint work, in terms of say that Green towel for wax, polish, sealant removal? Or should I have a dedicated color to each task ( such as a color for wax/selant and a color for polish )
 
I think I know where the OP is going.

There are green, white, yellow, gray etc towels that have THE SAME EXACT description, but different colors.

I bought two different colors assuming they were the same since the description matched all colors. Mike, are you saying that it's not the case as in they're not the same towel?

If that's the case, I'm pissed honestly.... Same description should yield the quality towel. TRC does the same with descriptions, it's just a different color...


Yes, that is exactly what I was getting at, I should have better explained it like you did. Even when you compare the pics of the different-colored towels, they look like they have the same weave/construction. If they are not all the same in quality vs. the greenies, AG needs to revise the description of the other colors.


Hey guys - sorry for any confusion. I feel your paint... :)



I've done some research this morning to try to find out what is what. But first I'm going to say something so everyone is CLEAR where I'm coming from. I already shared this but I'm going to share it again because I know there are a few cynical people on this forum that simply don't read and don't care to think let alone be nice.


One day while out in the garage, and this would be MONTHS ago, I found some towels that we didn't currently stock in the dirty towel boxes. I do all the laundry around here so of course I notice things like NEW COLORS of towels in my dirty towel boxes. I washed them and also checked them out. They were GREEN and had no edge. I then used them to wipe off a ceramic coating I had installed on a car. Now I really like them. Here's why,


1: Edgeless
They have no seemed edge. A seemed edge is not a bad thing because if you hold a towel CORRECTLY you don't wipe with the edges. Duh. But by not having an edge they become bubba-proof and that's a bonus for newbies and people that don't really care about good technique.



2: Low pile length.
Long fibers mean it's easy for contaminants to LODGE into the fibers and NOT wash out and thus contaminate the towel and eventually scratch paint.


3: Low pile length means EASY and FAST to inspect.
If you have not read my article or watched my video on inspecting towels do so here.


4: Same weave on both sides.
I waste a lot of time trying answering the question - which side for what? - when using towels that have a flat weave on one side and a fluffy weave on the other side. I teach a lot of classes, I dare to say I have more people (paying classes), go through my classes than any other instructor and any other class so I get asked a LOT of questions by a LOT of people and the towel questions are good and they always come up. By switching my classes over to the Forrest Green Edgeless towels I save time and avoid this question. Not a big deal to someone that doesn't answer a lot of questions but a it is something I deal with and I like to make my classes fun and easy.


5: Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
By this I mean, these towels are not to hard, not too soft they're just right for most paint related car detailing duties. They are not perfect for wiping off compounds but they work and I have something to share for this.

6: Did I mention they are soft?
Isn't that one of the reasons we use microfiber instead of terrycloth or other options? Clearcoats are SCRATCH-SENSITIVE - this means even though they are harder than traditional paints they still scratch easy and of course there are some very soft clearcoats and anyone that has worked on soft paint knows a soft towel is crucial.




Now let me put this together....

One day I found these green towels that I discovered in the dirty towel boxes in the warehouse for sale. So I placed an order for 300 of them and have been switching over to these towels for our classes.

I didn't spend any more time researching any of the other towels in the warehouse, I MOVED ON WITH MY WORK. I'm busy, I have too many other things to do than to inventory every towel in the garage and make a determination as to how I FEEL about it. :laughing:



Now, fast-forward to this thread and that people have pointed out that the DESCRIPTIONS on the AG store for various towels are the same. So this morning I went out to the towel aisle and started looking and then checked with Meghan about these other colored towels and found out that at the same time we brought in the Forrest Green towels we also brought similar towels that are described as the same towel just different colors.

Cool.

But I didn't know this.


I'm not updated with every new widget that's brought into the Autogeek warehouse and thus the Autogeek store. If I'm not told what what's new or what's coming in to Autogeek. The only other way I find out about new stuff is usually by accident, like doing my normal job of doing towel laundry. Or like you, I go to the AG store page and click the link on the left side navigation panel and click the link that reads,


What's New




With the above all said - all the towels in the picture below and also on the page I link to are supposed to be the same towel - just different colors. The point of the different colors is so you can COLOR CODE you job duties or personal preference. For example it's common to use a BLACK microfiber towel for job duties that would STAIN the towel, like wiping off tire dressing or plastic trim dressing, (both things can create a black stain), and this way you don't turn pretty white or yellow towels ugly with stains.



Here's the towels,

Nice_Towels.jpg


Nice_Towels_01.JPG





Here's the link,

Car Care Microfiber Towels, Microfiber dusters and microfiber Detailing tools



Now lets go a little deeper...

I grabbed each one of these towels and LOOKED at the fiber weave and simply FELT them and Yeperdoo - they all feel the same except the white towel. Could just be me or maybe it's the processing the towel goes through to make it white, but it feels softer and more limp. Nothing wrong with that as it makes the towel better at jobs where you need a towel that is less stout and more gentle, for example for doing the final buff on very soft paints.


So if you like the Forrest Green Edgeless towels you'll like any of the other colors.

Nice_Towels_02.JPG



Now that I know this I will continue to use the Forrest Green Edgeless towels for wiping off polishes, cleaner/waxes, finishing waxes and finishing sealants. I already have 300 in the garage so I'm not going to switch horses in the middle of the stream. Plus, I have a EDGED towel, sold on the Autogeek store as a Universal Towel, that I use and show for less important functions like wiping down door jambs, engine compartments, etc.



I hope this helps relieve some anxiety and even frustration over any purchases that you have made. If you have any of the above towels and you bought them to wipe stuff off of car paint you're good to go. If you think the are thin you are somewhat correct, there are thinner towels on the market, these are a happy medium. I actually don't like super thick towels and especially thick or super thick towels that have a long fiber length - to me they won't last long before they become contaminated and then I use them to check the oil in my car.


Now it's time for me to move onto a new task....




:bolt:
 
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