Wolfgang SiO2 spray sealant

Elliot@Autogeek

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Ultra-strength silica protection - spray on, wipe away!

Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray uses a blend of silica dioxide and super-polymers to create an long-lasting and hard-as-nails finish on your painted surfaces. Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray is easy to use and within minutes will impart a hydrophobic layer that shines like a wax and protects like a paint sealant. Perfect for use as a stand-alone sealant or as a topper on the paint coating that’s already been applied, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray provides the protection your need with the level of shine that you want.


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Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray provides extreme hydrophobicity to your paint and provides exceptional waterbeading.



In this new era of detailing, there are many and more ways your paint can be protected – car waxes, car sealants, paint coatings, and now, SiO2 spray sealants. While waxes and paint coatings tend to dominate the market, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray is making a name for itself when it comes to easy to apply paint protection. With an average protection time of up to 6 months, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray outlasts your favorite car wax without compromising the deep shine you’ve come to love!

Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray uses silica dioxide (most commonly found in nature as quartz) to provide a rock-hard layer of protection on your paint. This level of protection creates an extremely high surface tension which, in turn, makes the surface almost waterproof. Instead of pooling on the surface, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray makes the water (and other surface contaminants) roll right off!

In addition to extreme levels of hydrophobicity, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray leaves a slick finish that helps keep your car cleaner, as well as making it easier to clean next time. And of course, you can’t have a high gloss without a slick surface!


Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray is perfect as a quick, stand-alone paint sealant and can be applied as often as you want! Have a vehicle that’s already coated with a ceramic or quartz-based coating? Use Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray to boost your paint coating’s hydrophobicity and gloss levels!

Regardless of which method of paint protection you’ve used in the past, Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray is a stand-out, spray-on paint sealant/coating that can’t be missed!




Directions for use:
Shake well before use.
Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray works best on a freshly washed and dried surface.
Being cautious of overspray, spray an even layer directly onto the area to be treated. Using a clean and soft microfiber buffing towel, gently buff product away from the surface. Flip your towel to a clean side and remove any excess product.
No cure time is necessary!






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Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray Now in Stock - Free Bonus!
Our Price: $34.99



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Wolfgang Uber SiO2 Silica Spray 128 oz. Now in Stock!
Our Price: $109.99




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Wolfgang Uber Ceramic & SiO2 Coating Kit
Our Price: $205.95
Sale price: $154.99




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Wolfgang SiO2 Silica Spray Complete Kit
Our Price: $109.93
Sale price: $69.99

 
Interesting it doesn’t mention it and either does Blackfire. My initial thought was yes but now I’m not sure about glass... smooth trim is yes.
 
As long as it buffs off cleanly, it would probably be just fine for any window without wipers.
 
Don’t use on front or rear with with wipers as mentioned before


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I like most Wolfgang products I've used, however I doubt Wolfgang SiO2 spray is better for the money than Mother CMX or even Meguiar's Ceramic. I admit, I haven't purchased WG SIO2 but I have Blackfire SI02. I believe cost-benefit ratio of CMX and Meguiars are going to be hard for Wolfgang, Blackfire, and other boutique brands to compete with.
 
I like most Wolfgang products I've used, however I doubt Wolfgang SiO2 spray is better for the money than Mother CMX or even Meguiar's Ceramic. I admit, I haven't purchased WG SIO2 but I have Blackfire SI02. I believe cost-benefit ratio of CMX and Meguiars are going to be hard for Wolfgang, Blackfire, and other boutique brands to compete with.

Depends. If you buy by the gallon on sale the PBMG sio2’s are comparable price.


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I like most Wolfgang products I've used, however I doubt Wolfgang SiO2 spray is better for the money than Mother CMX or even Meguiar's Ceramic. I admit, I haven't purchased WG SIO2 but I have Blackfire SI02. I believe cost-benefit ratio of CMX and Meguiars are going to be hard for Wolfgang, Blackfire, and other boutique brands to compete with.

The Wolfgang SIO2 is a nice spray and wipe product. I suspect that it might bond to the Wolfgang spray ceramic coating better than CMX.
 
When it comes to cost for any siloxane based spray coatings, I definitely believe that Wolfgang SiO2 spray is better for the money than Mother CMX or Meguiar's Ceramic. Mothers CMX and Meguiar's ceramic at their cheap prices lack a strong bonding agent in the, hence the price. Bonding agent is the most expensive part of any "ceramic" product. Especially since most likely PDMS is used in Wolfgang, CMX, and Meguiar's. PDMS without a strong bonding agent=meaningless. The bond is as strong as soapy water on your car. I can take a 10 percent SiO2 spray product and have it last longer than Cancoat even though Cancoat is a higher concentration of SiO2. It just might cost three or four times as much as Cancoat.

Wolfgang doesn't have their SDSs online but I'm guessing it's a mix of their own polymers, with hydrophobic siloxane compound, PDMS, most likely some kind of strong petroleum distillate solvent (other wise the spray head would just harden after one use), and a methyl based bonding agent. Possible some alcohol or another kind of solvent like it to keep the mixture thin.

I say this with all due respect, but don't kid yourself. The cost-benefit ratio of some of the OTC protection products and boutique protection products is that for the OTC products, they can sell it at a quarter of the cost and make profit based on it because none of the ingredients are that expensive. The R&D perhaps, but the actual ingredient cost is much lower. However compared to say the boutique products, cost is a factor of course but the chemical ingredients and blends are much more convoluted and costs quite a bit more.

Boutique products are more performance driven than cost driven. OTC products are more cost driven. Performance only has to be an acceptable level to keep the cost down. Noone is gonna pay 35 dollars for a spray wax bottle at autozone when you have a 20 dollar or sub 20 dollar spray waxes there beside it.
 
I’m guessing packsfan post was before everyone realized CMX can’t hang. I won’t judge on Megs HCW since I haven’t used it and read mixed reviews. I can only speak that Pinnacle and BF SiO2 spray sealants blow CMX out of the water. Particularly Pinnacle, which is more substantial and I would expect to be most similar to WG with different polymers to match each brand’s calling card.
 
To be honest, if Mothers CMX contained more silane components to encourage PDMS bonding, it might drive the cost up to around 25 to 26 a bottle, but it would stand a better chance of hanging around.

Meguiar's HCW is more hybrid wax than hybrid ceramic anything. Maybe some siloxane components in it, but uses ethoxylated alcohol so using siloxane would be a wierd choice as it creates a hydrophilic surfactant instead of a hydrophobic one, usually. Ethoxylated alcohol is used as an emulsion agent to mix oil and water based products. Maybe just a more economical beading agent? The requirement to use on a wet surface might be because of the surfactant choices and solvent choices that requires water to activate? Who knows.

Cost to cost, comparing Wolfgang SiO2 spray to Mothers CMX or Meguiar's HCW is comparing different products. You're comparing a product with a denser SiO2 base with two products that are as ceramic as pam cooking spray. No, I don't mean that as an insult, cooking spray uses PDMS in other forms to prevent foaming and make the product hydrophobic.

Actually, great example there of hydrophobicness. PAM Cooking spray. When the spray is on your pan, it's hydrophobic. Wash it off with soap, and it's gone. No bonding agent. Not that there should be, it's cooking spray.
 
To be honest, if Mothers CMX contained more silane components to encourage PDMS bonding, it might drive the cost up to around 25 to 26 a bottle, but it would stand a better chance of hanging around.

Meguiar's HCW is more hybrid wax than hybrid ceramic anything. Maybe some siloxane components in it, but uses ethoxylated alcohol so using siloxane would be a wierd choice as it creates a hydrophilic surfactant instead of a hydrophobic one, usually. Ethoxylated alcohol is used as an emulsion agent to mix oil and water based products. Maybe just a more economical beading agent? The requirement to use on a wet surface might be because of the surfactant choices and solvent choices that requires water to activate? Who knows.

Cost to cost, comparing Wolfgang SiO2 spray to Mothers CMX or Meguiar's HCW is comparing different products. You're comparing a product with a denser SiO2 base with two products that are as ceramic as pam cooking spray. No, I don't mean that as an insult, cooking spray uses PDMS in other forms to prevent foaming and make the product hydrophobic.

Actually, great example there of hydrophobicness. PAM Cooking spray. When the spray is on your pan, it's hydrophobic. Wash it off with soap, and it's gone. No bonding agent. Not that there should be, it's cooking spray.

This comment is pretty accurate considering that Meguiars uses trade secret oils to attach their waxes to the paint surface.
 
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