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  1. #1

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    I was looking for review of 3M IHG and I came across this quote below. Is this true?



    http://autopia.org/forum/showthread....ial+Hand+Glaze



    Originally posted by DETAILKING

    #26 and #7 both can contain up to 5-10% abrasives. The big unknown and important information we are missing is the size and shape of these abrasives.



    Glazes and waxes use MILD abrasives to slightly mar the surface to increase durability. It gives the product more of a BITE on an other wise smooth surface.



    In my opinion, I would not use these products over KLASSE, as the abrasives and solvents in them, will definately weaken the base sealant layers. For minor swirls, multiple coats of KLASSE might fill them to a degree. For major swirls, just use some 3M swirl removing products on the effected panel, and then reapply wax or sealant......


    [edit: updated link]

  2. #2

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    I was always under the understanding that they did not.

  3. #3

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    I used #7 on black and red single stage for years, and never found it to be abrasive. In 2003 I had occasion to use it again, and I spoke with Mike Phillips about it. Don`t mean to :argue with DetailKing, but Mike Phillips said (both on the boards and in conversation) that Meg`s "pure polishes", i.e, #3/#5/#7/#81 are non-abrasive. When we spoke on the phone in `03 about an older Jag I was doing, Mike said that any "cut" from #7 would be a result of the application media (e.g., a cotton applicator), and we were talking about dark, old-school lacquer where any abrasion would be quite apparent. Having then used #7 on said lacquer, I found no indication that it was abrasive.



    If it *does* contain a certain percentage of abrasive ingredients, they must be so fine as to not do any *effective*/practical abrasion to automotive paint.



    3M IHG does not contain abrasives. The ingredients are oils and solvents.

  4. #4

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    What I really like about this post is the proof that people do search through the old threads :xyxthumbs

  5. #5

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    Reading through DETAILKING`s post again, I found that he got the info from the MSDS.



    Others have found aluminum silicate in the MSDS of IHG too. http://autopia.org/forum/showthread....glaze+silicate



    Everyone else`s post regarding IHG, #3, #5, #7, and #81 describes them as fillers / car makeup so I guess whatever abrasiveness there is is too minute to detect.



    If there is any cut, I`d tend to agree with Accumulator et. al. that it probably came from the applicator and the application method.



    [edit: updated link]

  6. #6

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    merci- Good spotting on that link to the new IHG ingredients :xyxthumbs My bottle was older and I was unaware of the change.



    Manufacturer`s reps have mentioned the "practical abrasiveness" a few times. IIRC, a little "abrasive" helps make a product easier to use, but yeah, a certain level of aggressiveness is required to "cut" automotive paint.



    The #7 I`m certain about, unless it`s changed recently. The Jag I was working on was ss BRG and there was no color transfer to the applicator or the buffing towels.

  7. #7

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    Update:



    Even Mother`s Sealer and Glaze has abrasives. Check out this thread:



    http://www.waxforum.com/showthread.p...t=sealer+glaze

  8. #8
    The Old Grey Whistle Test togwt's Avatar
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    Merci- As an industry car care product manufacturers have never, for whatever reason standardized their product descriptions. For instance-a polish is by convention something that contains an abrasive (depending upon abrasive size/material) to either abrade surface scratches or burnish the surface.



    There are lots of instances were a product description/name says one thing and yet it actually does something completely different (i.e. Zaino Z5 polish) which despite claims that it eliminates scratches contains no abrasive.



    An old-school product like 3M Imperial Hand Glaze contains no abrasives but does contain oils and fillers.

    I use the description old-school because back then you could tell what a car care product did by its description, not what a marketing person wants to call it purely for the sake of â€Ëœimageâ€â„¢ to help hype sales

    JonM
    What gets overlooked too often is that one must be a student before becoming a teacher.

  9. #9

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    TOGWT- Heh heh, we dinosaurs have to hustle to keep current huh? So now IHG has some abrasives in it, who woulda thunk it? It certainly is frustrating that product names are all over the map with regard to what they`re describing.



    Again folks, we need to take the practical aspects of this stuff into account. In the linked exchange with reps from Mother`s, Forrest says that the abrasives in the Sealant & Glaze won`t wear down paint "in your lifetime" and also posts "...the "mechanical abrasive" in Sealer and glaze is a microabrasive - it`s much, much finer than those in Pre-Wax Cleaner. It`s there to promote product adhesion, not to cut the way a more aggressive abrasive would." Just because something contains "abrasives" that doesn`t mean that it will necessarilly *effect abrasion* on automotive paint.



    Some of our cars were in our family for a *long* time, over twenty years in a few cases. The regular use of sensible abrasives *never* caused any problems.

  10. #10

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    I needed to know if the microabrasives in a glaze were enough to remove a coat of wax which would effectively ruin my plan below:



    glaze

    wax

    (wait 24 hours)

    glaze

    wax

    (wait 24 hours)

    glaze

    wax

    (wait 24 hours)

    glaze

    wax

    (wait 24 hours)




  11. #11
    The Old Grey Whistle Test togwt's Avatar
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    If a Glaze or any other product contains abrasives and is applied over any another product it may remove it, dependant upon how agressive the abrasive is.



    You may want to ask the mfg of the specific Glaze your planning to use (they have made something that should be so simple complicated, WHY?)



    Perhaps we need to add Glazes to the Autopia comparative abrasion scale (something I`d have laughed at prior to this thread)

    JonM
    What gets overlooked too often is that one must be a student before becoming a teacher.

  12. #12

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    merci- Heh heh, I have absolutely *no* idea if that plan of yours will work out! If you give it a try, let us know how it turns out.

  13. #13

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    A lot depends on the `glaze` too. #80 Speed Glaze is more aggressive than #82 Swirl Free Polish and Wax Shop`s Super Glaze has no discernable abrasives and it is in fact, their wax.
    www.scottwax.com

    Certified Opti-Coat Pro/Pro 3 installer

  14. #14
    Sun Blinded Detailer Mochamanz1's Avatar
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    Originally posted by DETAILKING

    #26 and #7 both can contain up to 5-10% abrasives.



    Is this true about #26 ? Also, are there any glazes which are chemical and not mechanically abrasive our there ?
    Prep is everything .. The rest is the window looking in....

  15. #15

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    Originally posted by mochamanz

    Originally posted by DETAILKING

    #26 and #7 both can contain up to 5-10% abrasives.



    Is this true about #26 ? Also, are there any glazes which are chemical and not mechanically abrasive our there ?


    According to Clearkote, Red Machine Glaze and Yellow Creme Wax (which is meant to be used as a glaze) are referred to as `non-abrasive`.
    www.scottwax.com

    Certified Opti-Coat Pro/Pro 3 installer

 

 
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