JuneBug said:Will my wife get her hormones straightened out?
Take it from someone who has been happily married for nearly 50 years --- won't ever happen!!!!!
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JuneBug said:Will my wife get her hormones straightened out?
Dan said:Because I can't get to the back sides of my wheels nor do I want to LSP them on a regular basis.
Don't get me wrong. OC is not a bad product. My point is that with proper care, you will get better results using a traditional LSP. Will it be more work, YES.
So in summary: Most important thing for paint... Washing it. I'd rather have the car washed once a week with ONRWW vs a car washed every six months that has OC. OC is effectively just more clearcoat. It is better than some clearcoats but not better than all.
Auto Concierge said:Coatings in of themselves used properly can be a wonderful addition to the protection of a clients vehicle, where it goes south (IMO) is when the attributes of the particular product(s) are hyped or in some cases outright false claims are conversed to clients.
I receive many inquires where a client is convinced that their Black vehicle will be "Locked down" and will look "Amazing" forever…………………… I refute this with real world truth and what performance they can truly expect to experience, at this point there is initial confusion but when the precepts I educate them on with proper maintenance procedures they realize that there is no "Magic product" in spite of what internet claims are made.
It always comes back to not cutting corners, hucksters have their time for awhile but quality overcomes this in time.
Thomas Dekany said:However, if the detailer does his job, and educates the client, that coated black paint can and will look fantastic for a long long time. Not to mention the swirl prevention.
Dan said:For neglected cars, sure OC is valuable but in my opinion, for a well maintained vehicle it is of little value to me.
House Of Wax said:I think that's the key part we can all agree on. Honestly the coatings that have come out in the past few years are all pretty amazing, but it's critical that people understand it doesn't give them the green light to throw caution to the wind. If a person is going to continue using the swirl-o-matic 5000 down the street, their car is going to look like crap no matter what is on it.
Thomas Dekany said:You are better than me, because I usually try to convince people to trade their black car in for something lighter or discourage ordering black to start with. However, if the detailer does his job, and educates the client, that coated black paint can and will look fantastic for a long long time. Not to mention the swirl prevention.
RaskyR1 said:Only if that client is willing to put in the time and effort to keep it that way. IME most do not. I explain the care to my clients, provide articles and videos for reference, and even offer product at a very generous discount. Most will buy all the products and tools needed to care for their vehicles, but when I follow up with them few actually use the stuff.
Seems to me that it's mainly the true car enthusiasts who are willing to spend the time required. Then there are those who simply bought a brand new car and want to know/feel that their paint is protected. These seem to be the ones who fail to follow up with the proper care.
Envious Eric said:
OC never protected against water spotting of bird droppings. I had a potential client go back and forth between me and someone else. She really wanted OC and I wasnt pushing it like another detailer. Eventually, she went to him, had it applied to her beater car, complained to me there were water spots all over the car two weeks later and nothing would remove them without heavily polishing the car again, not to mention the lack luster appearance...WSR didnt work, viniegar didnt work, light polishing didnt work, AIO didnt work...D300 finally worked, but needed a second step to clear up.
builthatch said:it's apparent you don't like Opti-Coat and i won't argue with you on that. but i have to ask about your anecdote:
one customer where another guy applied it...and it didn't "protect". do you mean it didn't keep the clear coat that came with the car safe? or that the coating sacrificed itself and was attacked by these things?
either way, have you found this to be the case in situations where you have applied it as opposed to how it reacted when some other dude put it on?
because, i gotta tell you, if you think that customer's experience or your experience with the coating on that car is the norm...i wonder how OPT has been selling coatings for so long to guys in this thread who still sell it.
Envious Eric said:I have applied opticoat on about 10 cars...all because the customer requested it after online reviews. 5 of those clients complained about it not providing scratch resistance (black bmw, white tesla, black range rover, red corvette) and wanted it stripped off and something else put on (22PLE or cquartz). 1 year later, those clients were happier.
The other guy who applied the opticoat knows how to apply it and does it all the time.
I had it on a friends black sapphire bmw and he commented on how bad it looked just 3 months later, and how it wasnt providing any scratch resistance from what he could tell. We bought him all new car care products and quality towels, yet it still scratched like nothing was there. He questioned whether or not it was worth it to have a coating on any of his cars. I applied Cquartz to it about a year ago and he is still happy with the looks and ease of maintenance, and wants it on his new cars coming up.
wheels on the other hand, it works pretty well against brake dust build up and provides easy cleaning. But, I have a new and better product that uses less and costs about the same, so its actually cheaper per application.
Thomas Dekany said:
Detailed Designs Auto Spa said:Thomas, I am not saying you're right or wrong. But using this image as an example of OCP's gloss is a bit misleading. In that lighting, just about any car's paint that is not hammered would look good. In this lighting, a swirled up car would look pretty stinking good. At any rate, any image can be enhanced to improve the looks. We all should accept the value of the words spoken by the person with a certain rapport for whatever it's worth.
Am I right in understanding the only CQF job you've done was the one on your vehicle after the shelf life expired? How many CQF projects have you completed within the shelf life?