imported_Bence
New member
Ohh my... Well, for me there is no definite answer.
It depends on time, mood, my eyes and finally the tactile experience itself. When time dictates, I go WOWA with OOS. My mood can ask for literally everything, depending on the actual curve. My eyes sometimes want bright, sometimes wet, or balanced, sometimes subdued and glowing. Then I want depth. Sometimes paraffin-oily richness like #16, sometimes darkened optics, like #26/NXT. If I want mirrory silvery ghosting reflections from a flatter angle, I use an acrylic. And finally the tactile thing. I am a paste fanatic and I enjoy the hard consistency - especially when I have to melt a bit of wax in my palm to massage it onto a nice panel. I always discover more and more details, curves, angles in the sheetmetal which cannot be experienced in another way. For me liquids are just liquids, but when I encounter a forever-spreading slick one like 845, then it's a unique liquid with a face in the crowd. I love when a product has a lovely removal characteristics. It can be both dusting-easy, or oily smooth, just it should have a certain positive character - so no belt sander-like one please.
I think that product consistency walks hand in hand with the "soul" of a product. As it goes thicker and thicker, the process becomes more and more therapeutic. A coating is genius when you factor in everyday aspects, but does it have enough soul? Similarly a WOWA can give a quick flash like "wow, it looks sooo good with sooo little work!"... Then the experience evaporates away together with the sealant. WOWA'ing a car can not be a ritual like a proper bare hand waxing session.
So I must say I'm an omnivore when it comes to car care...
It depends on time, mood, my eyes and finally the tactile experience itself. When time dictates, I go WOWA with OOS. My mood can ask for literally everything, depending on the actual curve. My eyes sometimes want bright, sometimes wet, or balanced, sometimes subdued and glowing. Then I want depth. Sometimes paraffin-oily richness like #16, sometimes darkened optics, like #26/NXT. If I want mirrory silvery ghosting reflections from a flatter angle, I use an acrylic. And finally the tactile thing. I am a paste fanatic and I enjoy the hard consistency - especially when I have to melt a bit of wax in my palm to massage it onto a nice panel. I always discover more and more details, curves, angles in the sheetmetal which cannot be experienced in another way. For me liquids are just liquids, but when I encounter a forever-spreading slick one like 845, then it's a unique liquid with a face in the crowd. I love when a product has a lovely removal characteristics. It can be both dusting-easy, or oily smooth, just it should have a certain positive character - so no belt sander-like one please.
I think that product consistency walks hand in hand with the "soul" of a product. As it goes thicker and thicker, the process becomes more and more therapeutic. A coating is genius when you factor in everyday aspects, but does it have enough soul? Similarly a WOWA can give a quick flash like "wow, it looks sooo good with sooo little work!"... Then the experience evaporates away together with the sealant. WOWA'ing a car can not be a ritual like a proper bare hand waxing session.
So I must say I'm an omnivore when it comes to car care...