Originally Posted by
Lonnie
Don:
You have run into the conundrum/dilemma that many Autopian detailers face: if you spot correct/polish a defect area, it stands out so much more than the surrounding area, that then you end up doing the panel. Then THAT panel looks so out-of place with the rest of the vehicle, that you might as well doing the rest of the vehicle. It takes a lot of detailing "restraint" (at least to OCD Captain Obvious!) NOT to do that and just spot correct the area as needed and let it go. That has happened with spot rinseless-washing bird droppings or bug guts; end up washing the whole vehicle to make it look the same and clean to my OCD detailing standards.
SOOO, does this 303 Graphene spray really get that much shinier/glossier as it cures?? Or is this just an "optical (dis)illusion" to the eye and mind?
Is this gloss "better" than waxes or sealants you may have in the past?
And does the 303 Graphene have a "filling effect" to hide minor defects OR does this magnify those surface imperfections and defects??
That was/is one of the bad raps on no-longer-relevant Liquid Glass sealant when it was layered multiple times on vehicle surfaces. Unless the surface beneath it was perfectly corrected first, it just seemed to magnify every surface defect.
What exact microfiber manufacturer(s) and type (s) did you use for the application and removal of 303 Graphene spray? IE, did you use a different one to apply or spread it out on surface than the one used to remove and buff it out? I ask this same question ALL THE TIME, but in my defense, good microfibers make-or-break the end results in using coatings and now these SiO2 and now graphene sprays, so I ask what microfiber(s) exactly the Autopain poster has used with any particular LSP product being reviewed.
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