Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat by Mike Phillips

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Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat by Mike Phillips

Last month I detailed this car to maximize the gloss, clarity and shine of the original single stage metallic paint. At the time I was going to apply the Tuf Shine Tire Coating to the tires but due to some questions the owner had about the tires themselves he asked me to hold off on the coating until he contacted Firestone and Coaker's Tires about the appearance of the sidewall itself. Now that any and all questions and concerns were removed, the owner Pad contacted me to move forward with applying the Tuf Shine Tire Coating to the sidewalls of these brand new Firestone Wide Oval tires.


Here's the link showing how I restored the original single stage paint carefully and methodically.

1971 Corvette Original Paint detailed by Mike Phillips

If you LOOK closely - you'll see there is NO tire dressing on the tires at the time I did the paint correction - the owner and me waned to hold off until the owner talked to Firestone.

71_Vette_011.JPG






Previously Machine Scrubbed
At the time I did the paint restoration on the Corvette I had first machine scrubbed the tires using the Mighty Mini with a Aqua Cyclo Brush and the Tuf Shine Tire Cleaner. Here's the link showing how I machine scrubbed the tires.

Review: Machine Tire Scrubber by Mike Phillips - NO SHOCK HAZARD WHILE WASHING YOUR CAR!

Machine_Tire_Scrubber_003.JPG





Tire Coating Time

This is key - Tires must be free from any tire dressing
Ever since that machine cleaning the owner has NOT applied any type of tire dressing to these tires and no tire dressing had been applied since they were purchased new. To me this is the key to using any tire coating successfully and that is to start with tires that have NEVER had a tire dressing applied to them. The reason why is because with some tire dressings, it can be pretty much impossible to remove 100% of the dressing off the tire sidewall and out of all the tiny crevices around lettering and other design features on the sidewall. So for me, my personal rule of thumb is I won't apply a tire coating to tires that have had dressings already applied.


Even though I had previously machine scrubbed these tires, before applying the tire coating I re-washed the front passenger side tire again. This was to ensure that there is no road film or any other substance on the tire since the initial cleaning.

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Here you can see the very clean and also very dull and lifeless looking rubber sidewall.

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I applied the Tuf Shine Tire Coating to the top portion of the tire and then had the owner move the Corvette forward until the portion of the tire in contact with the floor had rotated 180 degrees. This was to make it easier for me to get the other half of the tire but to also get the portion of the sidewall that was resting against the floor as the tire compresses a little.

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Here you can easily see a portion of the sidewall that has 5 applications of the coating and above it, the un-coated sidewall.

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Here's the tire completely coated with 5 applications. After applying each application I use the Metrovac Sidekick to do two things,



1: Speed dry the coating so I can add more layers without waiting.

2: Blow the coating into all the intricate areas on the tire sidewall and then blow any excess away from the tire by blowing from the lip of the rim outward.


Tuf_Shine_007.JPG



Done.

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The results are a hard dry shine that makes the tires look great and adds the finishing touch to the car.

Tuf_Shine_011.JPG




Review and thoughts...
I love this product. BUT only for tires that have never had any tire dressing previously applied. Too hard to 100% remove some tire dressings. So if I have a car that already has tire dressing on the tires I continue to use tire dressings on them. Only when I know 100% for sure there's never been a tire dressing on a tire do a go forward with the coating. When I do coat a tire I prefer to machine scrub the tire until any foam created via the scrubbing process shows to be white, no more brown or black foam building up while scrubbing. I usually machine scrub tires up to 5 times just to ensure they are completely clean.

Completely dry surface
What I like about a good tire coating is it turns the tire sidewall a very deep, dark black appearance BUT it's completely dry to the touch. If you run your hand over the tire sidewall or if you were to accidentally rub your car wash mitt over the tire, nothing comes off the tire. No oily, greasy black goo comes off like you can experience with some tire dressings. So it's a very clean way to seal and protect your tires and you don't have to worry about dressing-transfer onto you, your cloths or tire sling onto the body panels of your car.




On Autogeek


TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat 16 ounce

TUF SHINE Tire Cleaner 22 oz.

Metro Blaster SideKick



For cleaning tires...

Mighty Mini Cordless Polisher aka Machine Tire Scrubber

2 Pack Cyclo Polisher Aqua Soft Carpet Brush


TUFSHINETIRECLEARCOAT.jpg


:)
 
I like the idea of using that scrub brush on a drill. I have that same one and am going to see if it fits on my cordless unit now.
 
Mike a video would be great. I have used your method when using Tuf Shine or Mckee's tire coating. It is a time saver.
 
Re: Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat b Mike Phillips

.


Question?


Would anyone like to see a video of my application method for coating tires?



:)

I remember being at a buddy's house watching some 4x4 tv show. There was a commercial (or product spotlight?) in which you applied the old DP tire coating on a 4x4 tire. It was cool to see how you did it. Would be cool to see your current process
 
Re: Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat b Mike Phillips

I remember being at a buddy's house watching some 4x4 tv show.

There was a commercial (or product spotlight?) in which you applied the old DP tire coating on a 4x4 tire.

It was cool to see how you did it. Would be cool to see your current process


Yeah that was me with Matt Steel and Bruno Massel showing how to apply the DP Tire Coating which is now McKee's 37 Tire Coating.

Most of any how-to you see on TV is mocked-up, mostly due to time constraints. I remember that episode, they were putting BRAND NEW 37" tires on monster Jeep build so the tires didn't have anything on them.

In the real world, I would try to machine scrub tires before applying a coating. Working by hand is a tick on the wimpy, in-effective method.


:)
 
Re: Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat b Mike Phillips

Also just to add for anyone reading this into the future and considering applying a tire coating to there car's tires....

Don't waste your time if you have LOW PROFILE tires.

Why?

There's simply not enough tire to "see" and thus enjoy for all the work it takes to coat thin or low profile tires. I always use a dressing on low profile tires.


:)
 
Re: Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat b Mike Phillips

Also just to add for anyone reading this into the future and considering applying a tire coating to there car's tires....

Don't waste your time if you have LOW PROFILE tires.

Why?

There's simply not enough tire to "see" and thus enjoy for all the work it takes to coat thin or low profile tires. I always use a dressing on low profile tires.


:)
I can see that point when detailing professionally. For me on my personal car, I would never go back to tire dressings. Low profile or not, coating looks better, way easier to keep clean. They continue to look cleaner between cleanings. Don't have to reapply every wash. I find in the long run it's a time and product savings. I don't find the initial work to be that bad even for a low profile tire. I just do it when I have the wheels off to clean them, and the wheel wells.
 
Re: Review: TUF SHINE Tire Clearcoat b Mike Phillips

I can see that point when detailing professionally. For me on my personal car, I would never go back to tire dressings. Low profile or not, coating looks better, way easier to keep clean. They continue to look cleaner between cleanings. Don't have to reapply every wash. I find in the long run it's a time and product savings. I don't find the initial work to be that bad even for a low profile tire. I just do it when I have the wheels off to clean them, and the wheel wells.

Copy that.

If a person wants the benefits then the prep work and application work is worth it.

:)
 
How long does the coating stay on in real world daily driving?

Generally.



I applied it at least twice to the 40" Toyo tires on the Silverado I owned (sold about a year ago now).


I only washed the tires with a foam gun (car wash soap), when washing the truck, never saw the soap degrade the coating.

Nothing lasts forever... not even you or I.

Thus I "freshened" the deep, dark black shiny look with secondary applications over time. Usually 6-8 months or a year.

I was very impressed with how my tires looked after coating them and also impressed with how long the coating held up.


Rupes_Coating_Monster_Truck_042.jpg




Note for my truck and this Corvette, for both I machine scrubbed the tires FIRST and neither tires had ever had a tire dressing applied to them previously.


As always...


Your mileage may vary....




:)
 
***Update***


The owner of this Corvette was at last weekend's Cars & Coffee Car Show. I asked him how he was liking the Tuf Shine on his new retro tires?

He said, "Love it"


I took a few pictures....

TufShineUpdate_01.jpg


TufShineUpdate_02.jpg


TufShineUpdate_03.jpg


TufShineUpdate_04.jpg


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I posted the above pictures to my FB page last night,


Mike Phillips FB page



always amazed at what people will say on Facebook....


:dunno:
 
I’ve used this product in my last truck with great results. When we were living in N.J., I applied it in the fall, heavy cleaning then four coats. The coating held up well against snow, ice, and road salts. I would hit it with a Q.D. to rejuvenate and maintain.
Once spring rolled around, I cleaned the tires and refreshed with a new coat....Great product!

Steve
 
Hi Mike, do you think this Tuff Shine Tire Coating is capable of keeping a whitewall like this Vogue tyre clean or at least super easy to clean back to fresh with a simple soap & mitt wipedown?

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Whitewalls look nice, but in order to keep them looking right they require constant cleaning about once per week in order to keep the Mayo & Mustard looking tight. And when it comes to Vogues it would be great if aggressive scrubbing could somehow be avoided. Do you think the Tuff Shine Coating would be ideal?
 
Hi Mike, do you think this Tuff Shine Tire Coating is capable of keeping a whitewall like this Vogue tyre clean or at least super easy to clean back to fresh with a simple soap & mitt wipe down?


I'm not a fan of doing all the prep work and then coating thin sidewall tires. Just want to say that up front.

That said, what I would do is TEST on just ONE tire. Then see how it holds up. If it holds up and the mustard and mayonnaise stays clean then do the other 3.

That's what I did with the tires on the 1971 Corvette. There was the possibility there was a problem with the rubber sidewall on these BRAND NEW Firestone tires. The owner contacted Cokers Tires and Coker contacted Firestone. Firestone said there was no problem.

So I told the owner of the Corvette we should just coat ONE tire and then wait for a few weeks and make sure all was well. 2 months went by before I could get to them due to travel and classes. The coating was just fine so I re-machine scrubbed the other three tires and put 5 coats of Tuf Shine on them.

When the owner left Autogeek on a Friday night, he went to a RaceTrac store to get gas. He said some young kids walked over and said,

Cool car! The tires look great!


So test first and let some time go by and see what happens.

Better safe than sorry.


:)
 
@Mike Phillips. Thanks for the advice, that sounds like the smart thing to do.
As far as the tyres, if I were to get them for my own vehicle they’d be more along these lines, paired up with the original Cadillac wheels. I’ve always loved this look on a Cadillac.

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