Anyone heard of re-usable rubber clay bar?

i have used it, but i would warn about using it on dark/black cars. it lasts forever as you can clean them off so to speak. but ever abrasive. they will leave visible marring on dark colors. CG has it, called clay bar alternative
 
Hmm...call me skeptic - the thing with clay is that it grabs and holds contaminants - how does a rubber coated sponge do that?
 
I've used one (the Ultima packaged one-but it's going to be the same sponge sold with other kits from other places-the difference is the clay lube that comes with it) and it works very well.



Earlier this year, I had tested it and used a normal clay bar to see if there was anything in the paint (the car was less than a year old when I did this). Some dirt came up.



So knowing that was some contaminants in the paint, I used the elastrofoam sponge near the same section, then followed up with the clay bar again to see if anything remained. It was clean-so the sponge did do the job.



But like I said, the car is fairly new, so I don't know how well the sponge works on more intensive contaminants.
 
If it really works well, I think it's much more convenient than traditional clay. I'm really curous about fact that it needs only water as a lube, and it can be reused 15-25 times. Gotta get one of these to try...
 
So are we really saying that with lube, a piece of innertube rubber (basically the same as this w/o a sponge backing) would replace clay??? It still seems to me that a contaminant would get embeded into the clay, while this rubber 'eraser' would just move it across the surface. If it works, terrific - it just seems like there could be more risk of marring with a rubber bar.
 
abbeysdad said:
So are we really saying that with lube, a piece of innertube rubber (basically the same as this w/o a sponge backing) would replace clay??? It still seems to me that a contaminant would get embeded into the clay, while this rubber 'eraser' would just move it across the surface. If it works, terrific - it just seems like there could be more risk of marring with a rubber bar.



The one I have doesn't feel like a piece of intertube rubber, it is much softer and "gummier". Similar to a piece of taffy stuck on the sponge.
 
Domas said:
If it really works well, I think it's much more convenient than traditional clay. I'm really curous about fact that it needs only water as a lube, and it can be reused 15-25 times. Gotta get one of these to try...



Does it say that on the packaging? Not sure I would be comfortable doing that. I always use a little car wash.
 
it's been discussed several times on this board. you can find them cheaper at autodetailingsolutions.com ($12 each i believe). i found that if you're not careful, especially around curved edges, you may accidentally rub the bar at an angle and create a black mark on the paint (nothing that polishing/cleaning can't take out...)



it works great on really dirty cars and is MUCH faster than a normal clay job. however, i did notice some marring and would not recommend it on dark colored cars.



i've used my bar about 10-15 times so far and it's still holding up.
 
i used to sell the exact product yall are talking about. only use it if you like lots of scratches in your paint. also, they only cost 2.75... maaaad rape.
 
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