LikeaRock
...Dreaming on an E92....
Ah, good to know. I decided to try it on my hood, I just hit it with the Ultracoat Polish, AIO, and Longevity Sealant. I'll do another longevity coat then let it cure, I'll top it off with #26
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So did you do this a section at a time or wax the whole car and let it haze then followed your procedure? Cuz some waxes need to be buffed off right away correct?conrad.maranan said:With all of the recent talk about this, I decided to finally give this a shot last Friday. Here's how I went about it:
- Chill QD in freezer
- Wax car and dry to a haze
- Mist chilled QD on each panel
- Remove wax with MF
- Mist chilled QD on each panel
- Wax misted panels and dry to a haze
- Mist chilled QD on each panel
- Remove wax with MF
- Buff with MF
I'm not sure my method is correct, but I did notice a drastic difference in the appearance of my vehicle. There was more depth in the shine. The added bonus was not having to deal with residue while buffing off the wax.
Bence said:Correct methodology on spit shining (Bill D does it right!!!):
Spit shining is for building heavy coats, deepening the look, by preventing the solvents to re-liquify and remove the previous wax layers.
If you remove a hazed wax with QD, nothing special happens. You’ll just see a shiny, waxed/QDd surface - but it's not spit shining.
Usually, a wax with higher solvent content can/will remove the previous layer. Heavy carnaubas don’t have high solvent contents, so they can build pretty thick layers with this method. You need distilled water (eventually QD; as it is up to 95% water - but preferably carnauba QD, without alcohol) to neutralize the solvents in the newly applied layer; and the spritz has to be cold, to let the new wax to almost freeze onto the finish. Then you working it until the water/QD/wax disappears. First, you have a prepped-waxed surface. When you want to put on the second/third/etc. layer, you spritz a fine, light mist on the panel. Begin to wipe the wax on. While waxing, mist water/QD a few times. Work until your wax is disappeared. Go over with an ultrafine MF. Wait a bit (half an hour or an hour) then you can apply the next layer.
It is wise to follow the 'divided panels' method. If dust appears, the application was too thick. You can always remove haze with QD; there is nothing unusual in it. But better to have no dust/haze.
Theoretically, each carnauba paste will work good, but it can depend on the solvents, oils, application method (chilled water or QD). Remember, just removing the haze of a wax with QD is NOT spit shining yet! Only a holistic approach makes it perfect. So, mist, wax, mist, continue waxing, mist, wax disappeared, buff lightly with MF. And again... and again...
The golden rule with heavy carnaubas is that you never allow them to dry fully. For example, the dried Victorias are horrendous to remove...
Some feel that a thick, heavy initial application of wax gives a softer, richer touch. It is a good base to start with. However, ALWAYS apply extremely thin layers when spit shining!
The reason to use a damp applicator/towel/cotton balls etc., is to neutralize the solvents as much as possible, and to stop the fine coats of wax sticking to the applicator, thereby encouraging the wax to build thin, fine layers.
Usually a spit shined surface is slicker, smoother, and it has different beading characteristics; with even smaller beads, which have far bigger contact angles. The durability is about the same (or slightly better), but the improved, beautiful, mile-deep appearance is worth it.
So, once again: When you spit shine, you spritz water onto the surface BEFORE waxing, and WHILE you wax. The coats must be so thin and the application must be so thorough that you shouldn’t have haze/residue. If haze appears, the application was either too thick or too short. With the water you switch the solvents off and this allows the wax to build very heavy layers. That's why you should avoid QDs with alcohol, because it compromises the wax buildup. Beading characteristics is different, jetting is better, and the beads have smaller contact angles. Just do 5 layers with 30 minute breaks, and you'll see what spit shining is about...
Distilled cold water is better than the quick detailer?Bence said:Yep, basically that's it. But still, best is to do it with distilled water.