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Then maybe you should use a carnuba wax.It troubles me, living in hot/humid South Carolina, that this product has to "absolutely" be in a dry environment for 12 hours to realize it's full potential. My carport is natural AC, so no dry environment to speak of. NOT being critical here.
Then maybe you should use a carnuba wax.
I spritz the panel with water to apply nubas with no streaking problems.Thanks, however....IF memory serves me correctly, Carnauba is suseptible to moisture and will streak.
Glad it looks so good to you cause in the end that is all that matters.I've been using WGDGPS for two years now on top of KSG and liked it a lot. But last night I used it the same way I always do (over KSG) except this time I had polished the paint with a DA for the first time and taken out all the swirls. When I went out to the garage this morning I couldn't believe my eyes! The DGPS brought out such a deep reflective shine it was as if I had used a whole different product. It really does look DEEP. And it's still last years bottle so I know it hasn't changed.
The wolfgang used to put just a little more shine on top of the KSG, but now it just about doubled it. Strange.
It's funny how it gets glossier as it cures because it sure didn't look like that when I buffed it off last night.
It troubles me, living in hot/humid South Carolina, that this product has to "absolutely" be in a dry environment for 12 hours to realize it's full potential. My carport is natural AC, so no dry environment to speak of. NOT being critical here.
No, you buff it off. Then give it 12 hours to sit before doing anythin else or getting it wet.Just want to make sure im understanding this right, but with sealants in general...you put them on and actually give them 12 hours or so before you buff/wipe it off??
Just want to make sure im understanding this right, but with sealants in general...you put them on and actually give them 12 hours or so before you buff/wipe it off??
No, you buff it off. Then give it 12 hours to sit before doing anything else or getting it wet.
I live in Az so after 12 minutes it would probably be cured. We are anti-moisture out here lol.
That's touches on the topic of why I always use the term,
"Window of time"
The protection ingredients could be fully set-p in 2 minutes or 10 hours, some on the hood might be set-up in 18 minutes and maybe on the lower back fender they are fully set-up in 7 hours?
Who knows?
That's why by stating a "Window of time", you allow enough time as a general rule of thumb or "Best Practice" to insure that anything on the surface that's going to
or whatever term the manufacture uses to describe how their products works, that there is enough time, or a window of time for the magic to happen before you, with your hand start disrupting the protection ingredients by wiping on it with a dry cloth, or wiping on it with a a new moist/wet/liquid application of a new layer of product.
- Dry
- Cure
- Cross-link
- Bond
- Set-up
- Adhere
- Fill-in-the-blank...
This is deeper than most people want to get including myself as I don't believe we should turn waxing our cars into Rocket Science, but this is the nature of discussion forums.
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Ok...do you really even need anything else after WG deep gloss? I guess you could top it with a wax? I live in Az so after 12 minutes it would probably be cured. We are anti-moisture out here lol.
I found that not even a second coat of deep gloss makes any difference. If anything I think it took away some gloss from the first one. And I really like this wax. I think it looks enough like a real wax that topping it with wax isn't necessary. I tried a coat of P21s once but it too took something away IMO.
I am using it on a medium grey metallic so it may be different on darker colors.
Thanks for the info. Makes sense...but like you said that is leaning a little more towards the rocket science part rather than just enjoying what you're doing..good to know thou i suppose.
I'm kind of a 'by feel' type of person...so i dont see myself setting an alarm clock for 12 hours later so i know exactly when i can get back out and finish up the work on the car....I can understand giving it cure time thou.
Now if youll excuse me im going to go untangle my brain :xyxthumbs:
it's actually not to hard. if you spend all day or morning working on the car, by the time your done putting on the sealant, it's late and your tired. you wipe it off and call it a night or day. when you wake up, you put on your lsp and your good to go. don't make to much out of it.:dblthumb2: