Colour specific wax

Special Waxes (Marque specific)



An organic wax, unlike a polymer, has no chemical interaction with paint; it forms a thin hard ‘shell’ as opposed to a polymer, which forms a molecular bond. Wax when it’s correctly applied is a thin translucent layer, this renewable barrier is probably less than 0.1 µ, a barely visible film, which will have very little affect on the perceivable paint colour, this applies to both clear coat and single stage paint



The base coat or colour coat is applied and a clear coat is added to provide depth and protection. Regardless of its original colour of the wax, any product applied on top of the clear coat needs to be transparent otherwise the paint colour will be muted, if you can see the colour of a wax on the paint surface it’s applied too thickly



Claims that certain waxes are formulated and / or manufactured for specific paint types, paint colours or made specifically for a certain vehicle marquee or that they are matched to particular characteristics of individual paint systems has absolutely no factual chemical basis, I think it is merely marketing hype.



For example both Porsche and Ferrari (amongst others) use Glasurit as their paint supplier, very different vehicle manufacturers. How would a wax especially made for Italian paint (Zymöl Ital) not work on a German Porsche?



The clear coat is the final original equipment manufacturers coating applied to a vehicle to protect the (base) colour coat from environmental damage, while providing both depth and a durable, glossy appearance, originally designed to protect and enhance metallic paints, but is now applied to all colours. Any product applied on top of the clear coat needs to be transparent otherwise both the paint colour and its depth of shine will be muted.



An applied wax protection is less than 0.1 µ; so the suggestion that a coating this thin could change or even enhance a colour doesn’t sound very plausible to me. Although waxes and polymers do have differing light reflectance properties and differing paint colours will reflect light differently according to their Light Reflective Value (LRV)(See Light Reflection article)



If you search (I'm using that 'bad' word again) DoDo Wax site e has some interesting ideas on the concept

 
TOGWT said:
...The base coat or colour coat is applied and a clear coat is added to provide depth and protection. Regardless of its original colour of the wax, any product applied on top of the clear coat ...



-AND-



M.Apesland said:
I am going to be detailing my 67 el camino that has red single stage paint.



;)





M.Apesland- Even with single stage, unless the paint has some weird (and unfortunate) issues, I wouldn't use the "red wax". Or rather, I wouldn't expect it to make things look much better just because it has a red pigment in it instead of something else (like, uhm....blue).



It's always tricky to determine which LSP (Last Step Product, i.e., "wax") will look best on a given paint, let alone what a given individual will prefer.



On single stage, *I* generally prefer old-school approaches such as a glaze topped with a wax. The classic example is Meguiar's M07 topped with either their M16 or M26 paste wax. I'd pick a glaze and a wax and do it that way, probably one of the various Megiar's glazes (they call 'em "Pure Polishes" and that includes M03/M05/M07 and some others) topped with Collinite 476S or 915 (unless you just *must* have the signature look of Pinnacle Sӧuveran, which will need redone after every other wash or so).



But that's just me and you might like some completely different look :nixweiss



No matter what though, you oughta consider polishing out any existing marring, assuming the paint is thick enough to withstand that.
 
Thanks. Yes I will be polishing it as I am not going to be doing the body for a while. I will get the Meg's glaze and will be ordering the collinite and pinnacle waxes.
 
Wax when it’s correctly applied is a thin translucent layer, this renewable barrier is probably less than 0.1 µ, a barely visible film, which will have very little affect on the perceivable paint colour, this applies to both clear coat and single stage paint



I need to incorporate single stage paint into this article... THANKS
 
TOGWT- Yeah, I just had to point that out since it really can make a little bit of difference. The way most single stage is (or at least acts :think: ) a lot more porous than b/c can make it really "soak up" products, often unevenly, with sometimes, uhm....interesting results.



And this is leaving aside the whole issue of older-tech ss, where the "feed the paint" thing isn't the BS that it is with more modern paints. You know, the stuff behind why Meguiar's originally called M07 "Sealer and Reseal Glaze".



M.Apesland said:
Thanks. Yes I will be polishing it as I am not going to be doing the body for a while. I will get the Meg's glaze and will be ordering the collinite and pinnacle waxes.



The "best looking" of those Meguiar's glazes/"pure polishes" is their M07, but it can be a royal PIA to work with (streaking/etc.). The easiest to use (by FAR) is M05 and it's my fave for that reason despite its so-so looks. Their M03 (don't let the "machine polish" name scare you off it, works fine by hand) is kinda in the middle and so is their M81 (dunno if they still make it or not). The Deep Crystal Step#2 Polish is another one of these glazes to consider (if, again, they still make it).



Note how I'm a bit out of touch on the current offerings. That's because I don't use 'em much, even on my older single stage car. But they're still the "conventional widsom answer" for this and you might think the approach is perfect (many do).



On the wax, while I do use/like the Pinnacle Sӧuveran, I only use it on a vehicle that gets waxed *every* time it gets used/washed, and I haven't gotten that car out of mothballs for years. SO....I really think you oughta go with the Collinite instead. IF the car doesn't look OK it won't be because you used Collinite instead of Sӧuveran. I mean, really...do you want to rewax the vehicle *every* time for an appearance diff that's minimal at best? You might even *prefer* the look of the Collinite, wouldn't surprise me a bit.
 
I've had good results with Meguires #9 on single stage paint. Also, like Autoglym Super Resin Polish for one stage.

Also, "color-coded" polish has been around for years, marketed as "color magic" or, previously "color match". I've used these products to (temporarily) hide light scratches, or fill tiny chips. Until recently, it came in all kinds of colors, but I only see black on the shelves now.
 
Accumulator said:
But they're still the "conventional widsom answer" for this and you might think the approach is perfect (many do).



Another of those "conventional wisdom" answers that hasn't been mentioned yet: 3M Imperial Hand Glaze. Not necessarily as nice as some of the Meg's offerings, but a solid choice nonetheless.
 
Lost in translation?



Perhaps I'm just confused, it gets easier as you get older ;)



Are we discusssing colour changing wax or a wax suitable for single stage paint?
 
TOGWT- Heh heh heh...I could be wrong, but here's my take on it- I figured we were discussing the use of a like-pigmented wax to (supposedly) enhance the color of a single stage paintjob.



I can actually imagine this working, at least to some minimal extent, but overall I'd skip it and go with a "conventional" glaze/wax combo.



Not that somebody using, say....Zymol's HDC topped with their Red wax might not get wonderful results. I just think that overall, it'd be a case of wasted money and unrealized expectations leading to disappointment.





C. Charles Hahn said:
Another of those "conventional wisdom" answers that hasn't been mentioned yet: 3M Imperial Hand Glaze. Not necessarily as nice as some of the Meg's offerings, but a solid choice nonetheless.





Oh yeah....how could that slip my mind what with it sitting on the shelf right next to the Megauiar's stuff?!? Guess I'm just stuck in my ways, only use the 3M stuff on fresh repaints (when I'm in the mood for something other than M05).



Gee, I can't even remember the last time I used the IHG/wax combo, but it was *hugely* popular here about a dozen years ago.
 
Accumulator said:
Oh yeah....how could that slip my mind what with it sitting on the shelf right next to the Megauiar's stuff?!? Guess I'm just stuck in my ways, only use the 3M stuff on fresh repaints (when I'm in the mood for something other than M05).



Gee, I can't even remember the last time I used the IHG/wax combo, but it was *hugely* popular here about a dozen years ago.



Indeed it was; if I remember right people were using either Sӧuveran or One Grand Blitz Wax at the time to top IHG.
 
Thanks For all the input guys, I ended up going with menzerna finishing glaze 115c for the glaze as enshine didn't have the megs stuff available. I also got CG 50/50 wax blackfire WD collonite 476 and 845, and victoria concourse red in shipment with my pc and Pads.
 
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