Am I wrong?

Paint Sealant



Protects by sealing and strengthening your new vehicle's paint finish. It eliminates the need for monthly waxing to maintain a surface lustre.



This professionally-applied formulation adds a resilient, transparent, high-gloss finish to the modern two-coat paint systems (clear coat / color coat), making it resistant to extreme weather conditions, the sun's ultraviolet fading and surface oxidation due to acid rain and industrial fallout.



With normal hand washing and the use of the Pro-Tech Seal maintenance products to remove baked on road dirt and wash detergent build-up, your car will maintain its original sealed new paint lustre.



Yup gotta use the maintance products. Sounds like a typical dealer sealant.
 
that guy is pretty ignorant...... i love that last comment on that forum you posted



"i use a 10 yr sealant on my old car. i also got 200 mpg. it was awesome"





hahaha...
 
Hey guys....



It seems this guy has toned down a bit now that others have also questioned him....well not so much him but the product.



His claim is that after years "it still beads water". This has more to do with surface tension more so than wax or a sealant being present. Clay a car, remove all wax and water will bead.



By the way, he sent me a PM, after writing his reply in which he told me not to call him a liar, and in the PM he entitled it...."Stop being a #*ick!" :)



Mr. Clean....



Good points you raise and I respect your opinion. My use of "weekend warrior" was meant to identify the person that doesn't care to spend more than 45 minutes washing and waxing their cars. I should of used a different name as I usually identify "weekend warriors" as people who love to detail their cars. My bad.



"Feeling the paint" is not so much a phrase that describes the actual event of feeling the paint, as anyone detailing by hand is literally feeling the paint but rather I use it to describe the difference between waxing, with say a PC, and waxing by hand. Most enthusiasts prefer waxing by hand because for them it's a labor of love. Most pro's would love a product that you spray on the car and then you're done while a great many enthusiasts would cringe at that and go back to their applicators and tub of wax :)



Thanks,

Anthony
 
You were not wrong, Anthony. It is important to make people back up claims like that, especially since we all know there is no sealant that lasts that long. Besides, if it won't protect against scratches, etc, what is the point? You are going to have to polish the paint to correct the defects and end up removing the product anyway.
 
I noticed on the website, the sealant needs to be reapplied yearly. So much for 10 years protection with one application.
 
I glad he keeps making money on a 10 year sealant...sooo many come back in that time frame.

Anyways 10 year lifespan when he has only been applying it for 7 years???? and guessing why not 3 more...sounds very scientific to me.
 
Anthony Orosco said:
and it comes with a lifetime guarantee that if the paint fades you get a free $5,000 factory quality paint job at the auto body shop of your choice.



There's the switch right there. He takes "paint won't fade during this time" in the guarantee and replaces it with "product lasts this whole time" in the marketing pitch. I could keep my car in a garage at home and work, never do anything but wash and polish/glaze it, and I would be willing to guarantee it won't fade in 10 years.



And how would you prove fade? Tape off a panel of the car, and peel the tape off 10 years later? Unless it faded horrifically, it would be hard to prove this since the whole car will fade pretty uniformly.
 
Aurora40 said:
There's the switch right there. He takes "paint won't fade during this time" in the guarantee and replaces it with "product lasts this whole time" in the marketing pitch. I could keep my car in a garage at home and work, never do anything but wash and polish/glaze it, and I would be willing to guarantee it won't fade in 10 years.



And how would you prove fade? Tape off a panel of the car, and peel the tape off 10 years later? Unless it faded horrifically, it would be hard to prove this since the whole car will fade pretty uniformly.
I know people who never wax their cars other than the spray wax that comes with a automatic car wash, and their car are not faded, scratched up , yes, but not faded .
 
lawrencea said:
I know people who never wax their cars other than the spray wax that comes with a automatic car wash, and their car are not faded, scratched up , yes, but not faded .



True. Unless the clearcoat is comprimised in some way or defective, the base coat isn't going to fade appreciably over the useful life of the vehicle. I have a customer with a 1984 Mercedes 280E whose original base coat/clear coat paint looks great.
 
is it even physically possible for this substance to "seep down into the paint down to the primer" like he says.... in only (a couple?) hrs w/o heat.

even if it did "seep into the paint down to the primer" how exactly would that help with rock chips or slickness...
 
:D :D you guys are crackin me up!



To the 2 "scott's" - Great insight from both:xyxthumbs



So there is now a sealant that lasts 16 years eh......man, it's hard to find a marriage that lasts that long:eek:



There is no way a sealant can seep down through the clear coat/base coat to the primer and then also protect against rock chips:nono



Utter nonsense..... Moo



Anthony
 
Rob Tomlin said:
Where is that B.S. Flag icon when you need it???





:rolleyes:



http://www.scottwax.com/smilies.htm



Bottom left side of the page.
kekekegay.gif
 
infact, I think the better way to argue this is to present to him that you use something that lasts longer and then make him prove you wrong, which would be proving him wrong, which would end up in him eating his foot.
 
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