World Rally Blue 2022 BRZ Meets Gyeon Pure Evo

Desertnate

Active member
...and the results are spectacular!

This car actually came home to my garage in late January, but weather and life meant it saw nothing but frequent washes and an application of Griots 3 in 1 until time allowed for a proper detail job. Memorial Day weekend provided the opportunity to give this little rocket the attention it deserves.

For this job I ran a standard process.
1. Washed with Hyperwash
2. Synthetic clay with the Blackfire clay mitt
3. Polish
4. Prep with Eraser
5. Coated with Gyeon Pure Evo

Polishing the car was rather uneventful. The dealership respected my wishes to not prep the car, so the only damage needing correction was the few swirls installed by the attendants caring for cars at the annual auto show before I took delivery. I used both my G15 and G8 polishers and a variety of medium polishing pads I have on hand. With some of the strange contours and shapes of this car, the G8 really proved it`s worth and I used it more on this car than any other so far. For polish, I started out with SONAX 04/06 but quickly found it didn`t have enough cut to pull off a one-step job like I was wanting. It created good gloss, but even with a medium polishing pad I wasn`t getting as much correction as I hoped. This little Subi`s paint seems to be a touch harder than our Toyota`s. This finding led me to right to Griots Finishing Cream. It provided just enough correction for the swirls and really created great gloss on the paint. Despite being new, polishing the paint made it noticeably shinier.

Pure Evo went on with little drama. Despite changing temps and humidity the coating still kept a pretty long flash time. In fact, on a car this small, it was almost too long. At one point I found myself with most of the passenger side covered and I was waiting around for the coating to flash. Once flashed removal was pretty easy; a touch more difficult and grabby than CQUK 3.0, but not difficult by any measure. I`m still adjusting to using the coating applicator pads vs a mf swatch and a foam block. This lead me to apply it a little heavy at the start, but I soon realized how far I could really go with the few drops applied to the provided applicator.

When I was first finished I liked the results, but was a little disappointed. It didn`t look that much different than when I was done polishing. A couple hours later I checked on it and noticed a bit more gloss. Couple hours later...a bit more. When I checked in on it the next morning; WOW, that dipped in glass look I was after was in full effect. I drove the car a bit and then had to park it outside in the sun, and I`m pretty sure the gloss continued to improve. I know some people feel nothing really changes as a coating cures, but I don`t agree. I think both CQUK and now Pure Evo both improve as it cures. If you don`t agree, I`m willing to duel at dawn with pool noodles to defend my honor.

Enough talking, you all came here for the pictures. Enjoy!
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Thanks, everyone!

I was pretty happy with the choice of color, but in the back of my mind I always wondered if I`d like the darker blue better. A couple of weeks ago I finally saw a car in the darker color, and I`m quite happy with my choice.

The pictures really don`t do the car justice with the lowered resolution levels and the slight darkening of the image because of light levels at the time. The level of "dipped in glass" appearance just doesn`t come across very well. Even my wife, who rarely pays attention and simply tells me the vehicles look good to be nice, commented on how great the car looked. Polishing combined with the Pure Evo is a home run.
 
Thanks, everyone!

I was pretty happy with the choice of color, but in the back of my mind I always wondered if I`d like the darker blue better. A couple of weeks ago I finally saw a car in the darker color, and I`m quite happy with my choice.

The pictures really don`t do the car justice with the lowered resolution levels and the slight darkening of the image because of light levels at the time. The level of "dipped in glass" appearance just doesn`t come across very well. Even my wife, who rarely pays attention and simply tells me the vehicles look good to be nice, commented on how great the car looked. Polishing combined with the Pure Evo is a home run.

Definitely right choice!


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Desertnate:
Late to the party here, but you new World Rally Blue Subaru BZR looks better-than fantastic. Maybe it is just my affinity to that particular blue hue, so my judgmental visual description is somewhat prejudiced.

Anyway, thank you for your written description about the polishing process and comparing the Sonax 04/06 polish with Griots`s Garage Perfecting Finish Polish. I also find your evaluation of this Suby`s paint as being "touch hard" compared to Toyota`s being somewhat surprising, considering Subaru`s have had the reputation of having soft to very soft paint (clear coat). What specific pads did you use with the GG-PF on the G8 polisher?

The Pure Evo application process is well written as well. What specific manufacturer and type of applicator did you use and the same question for the microfiber did you use for wipe-off with this coating?

I just wonder why and what factors you considered for using this particular Pure Evo coating for this car. Just curious..
Cannot knock or disagree with the final outcome.
 
Nice write up. Only used Moh evo on the new line up. Been happy both seem great. Only thing I notice is It seemed like I used a ton product. On a car I coated plenty of times and always had half of 30 ml bottle left done but when I used the whole Evo Mohs. Was Pure this way too?
 
Nice write up. Only used Moh evo on the new line up. Been happy both seem great. Only thing I notice is It seemed like I used a ton product. On a car I coated plenty of times and always had half of 30 ml bottle left done but when I used the whole Evo Mohs. Was Pure this way too?

I think I used a proportional amount when remembering back to other vehicles I`ve coated recently with CarPro CQUK or TiO2. With those coatings I could do a car like a BMW 435 or a Dodge Charger with about 20ml of product. This car required about 15ml. I have roughly half of my 30ml bottle left over.

For me, I think it is a learning process going from using the traditional mf fabric swatch and a form block to an applicator like you get with Gyeon. I`ve only used a applicator pad one or two times before working on this car. With the swatch/block I figured out how much product to apply each time years ago. With the applicators, I have to re-learn the process.

When I started applying Pure to the car, I realized I was going way to heavy. As the work continued, I was able to adjust how much product I needed to add and I throttled back quite a bit. I noticed my "burn rate" of product slowed down quite a bit as I progressed. Most of the product I used was probably on the first 1/3 of the car. If I coated the car again today, I`m pretty sure I`d use a little less.
 
I think I used a proportional amount when remembering back to other vehicles I`ve coated recently with CarPro CQUK or TiO2. With those coatings I could do a car like a BMW 435 or a Dodge Charger with about 20ml of product. This car required about 15ml. I have roughly half of my 30ml bottle left over.

For me, I think it is a learning process going from using the traditional mf fabric swatch and a form block to an applicator like you get with Gyeon. I`ve only used a applicator pad one or two times before working on this car. With the swatch/block I figured out how much product to apply each time years ago. With the applicators, I have to re-learn the process.

When I started applying Pure to the car, I realized I was going way to heavy. As the work continued, I was able to adjust how much product I needed to add and I throttled back quite a bit. I noticed my "burn rate" of product slowed down quite a bit as I progressed. Most of the product I used was probably on the first 1/3 of the car. If I coated the car again today, I`m pretty sure I`d use a little less.

Is it an oil slick type of flash or is it the sweating micro beads? MOHS was a micro bead sweating one. Im usually stingy when applying a coating maybe I was heavy on application I used a saver autofiber too.
 
It`s very much an oil slick rainbow flash. One thing I found interesting is the flashing appeared really quickly, but the coating was not ready to buff out. It has a long flash time and I had to let it sit for a few minutes to prevent any smearing while buffing it out. I resorted to a finger swipe rather than watching to flashing to make sure it was ready. A lot like you do with some sealants.
 
Wow that something mohs and pure are completely different. Gyeon was smart getting the prices down too. Prob be the next coating ai get is pure
 
Now that you’ve had the car for a little over a year, how are you liking it? As entertaining as it appears to be?

Thanks for any updates!


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Now that you’ve had the car for a little over a year, how are you liking it? As entertaining as it appears to be?

Thanks for any updates!

The car is a blast and I still love driving it. Right now I`m sitting at just a hair over 10K trouble free miles.

I drive it daily to work and it makes even a trip to the grocery store a small adventure. Despite the fact it sits so low I spend most days looking at the liscense plates and rear differentials of all the trucks around here, it`s actually well suited for the daily grind. The seats are comfortable, it gets good gas mileage, and the trunk has plenty of space for running errands or even a weekend trip out of town.

I also ran it in a full season of autocross with our local SCCA region where I learned how much fun it can be to toss a tiny, light, RWD car around the cones.

My only regret is I live a touch over an hour away from any real roads I`d call twisty. The car is really shines when you trying to change direction rapidly.

How is the coating holding up through the winter?

Sadly, winter skipped my part of the country, so it hasn`t been much of a test. Cold weather really only lasted a couple weeks and we haven`t had any measurable snow so I don`t think they ever salted our roads once. However, it has been cool and rainy enough to prevent regular washings like in the warmer months.

In those conditions it has held up great so far with fantastic water behavior.

One thing I did mess up on what attempt a second coat a couple months after the first one was applied. Despite my best attempts to do a thorough decon, something must have gone wrong and the results was the second layer being a bit hazy. No fault of the coating, but the lesson learned for me was I should have stopped while I was ahead with a fabulous looking single layer. It has always worked out fine for me no matter what coating I`ve used.
 
The car is a blast and I still love driving it. Right now I`m sitting at just a hair over 10K trouble free miles.

I drive it daily to work and it makes even a trip to the grocery store a small adventure. Despite the fact it sits so low I spend most days looking at the liscense plates and rear differentials of all the trucks around here, it`s actually well suited for the daily grind. The seats are comfortable, it gets good gas mileage, and the trunk has plenty of space for running errands or even a weekend trip out of town.

I also ran it in a full season of autocross with our local SCCA region where I learned how much fun it can be to toss a tiny, light, RWD car around the cones.

My only regret is I live a touch over an hour away from any real roads I`d call twisty. The car is really shines when you trying to change direction rapidly.

Glad to hear it’s entertaining you so much Took me years to learn that sometimes it’s more fun to drive a ‘slow’ car fast as opposed to driving a ‘fast’ car slow! Who knew there was more to life than gobs of horsepower & torque?

Gonna head to MidOhio in April to do first HPDE, albeit a limited ‘taste’ of a few laps w instructor in car. Probably best that way


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Glad to hear it’s entertaining you so much Took me years to learn that sometimes it’s more fun to drive a ‘slow’ car fast as opposed to driving a ‘fast’ car slow! Who knew there was more to life than gobs of horsepower & torque?

Agree! I spent most of my life chasing horsepower only to find it wasn`t all I thought it would be. Another interesting lesson to learn is the all the cool technology being built into some vehicles are actually muting the driving experience. This BRZ is a P-51 compared to BMW 435 which was an F-16. I`m happier in the P-51 because I feel EVERYTHING and it`s mechanically/technologically very simple.

Gonna head to MidOhio in April to do first HPDE, albeit a limited ‘taste’ of a few laps w instructor in car. Probably best that way

Just make sure you upgrade your brake fluid...and maybe your pads. I did an HPDE on OEM pads and did OK, but would have boiled the fluid if I hadn`t upgraded it.

How far away is Mid Ohio? The best HPDE tracks for me are all about 3~5 hours away. Going to any of them adds the cost/complication of at least one overnight stay.

I think everyone needs to do a couple HPDE at sometime in their lives. I really need to do one in this car.
 
HPDE is an acronym for "High Performance Driving Education". Yes I looked it up on Google.
Are there "classes" offered through high performance driving training business, like Skip Barber`s Racing School, OR though vehicle manufacturers when you buy a high-performance car and pay for such a class at a track as an option to get the most out of that vehicle.

OK, I will check it out on Wikipedia: Seems like it`s an introduction to autocross events and what you need equipment wise, along with teaching high-speed/performance driving skills.

Speaking of driving skills, an editor of a car magazine (Road and Track, I think) had his teen-age girls go through a winter-driving school in Colorado put on by Bridgestone tires. He said it was the best money he spent on driver education for young people. I am NOT laughing, as some (NOT all) of the accidents during Wisconsin winters are caused by drivers unfamiliar with winter driving, especially immigrants/relocated individuals from non-snow areas of this world or US nation who have NEVER driven in snow until that first snow fall. NOT a good time to learn how on public roads driving next to them. ABS does NOT stop a SUV or AWD vehicle in snow quickly if the driver is going too fast for conditions. Laws of physics still apply, including co-efficient of friction of a surface substrate and the tires that they are traveling over, not to mention driver reaction times due to visibility limitations. (You do know you are required to clean the snow off ALL your vehicle`s windows before you start driving, not just what the front wipers remover, right?? OR get blown off when you start driving at highway speeds OR melt off as the vehicle warms up. Tell-tail sign of a "novice" (politically-correct term/title) winter driver.)
 
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