Newtodetail
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What is the best way to apply Collinite 845 by hand. With a round foam “wax” pad, or MF “applicator pad”, or somthing else? Thanks
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lw81 said:how do you know if you've applied it thin. can you tell by looking at it?
lw81 said:how do you know if you've applied it thin. can you tell by looking at it?
Accumulator said:IME 845 doesn't have to go on *whisper*-thin the way some sealants do, so it just oughta look like, well...not really thick. I really do think it'll be intuitively obvious- you don't want thick, white residue, you want to aim for just enough that you can see a light haze after it dries.
As long as you have 845 on the applicator, and you move the applicator across the paint, you'll get enough 845 transfer for things to be OK.
Just keep in mind that 99.9% of any wax/845/whatever you can see on the paint gets buffed off anyhow, think of LSPs as bonding at the molecular level.
It's not like you need to use a whole ounce to do, say, a Suburban, that's a whole lot more than I use.
RdRover said:.. Got to be careful when you "pour" 845 on any applicator... I normally hold it up to the bottle and turn it upside down, that'll give you enough wax to work with..
.. Just watch out for that white build up in cracks and around trim, wipe it off before it dries.
RogueM3 said:If the buffing off process removes 99.9% of the product you have applied, why does it matter whether or not the application is thick or thin?
Obviously it is wasting product and hurting your wallet, but are there other adverse effects of applying too thick?