imported_Intermezzo
New member
Waxes, sealants, tire-dressing...everything you put on the surface of your paint "bonds" to the surface. If it wasn't bonded to your paint, it would slip right off.
The key factor in a good quality poly-siloxane or sealant's durability is whether or not it contains resins that CURE or CROSSLINK on the surface it is being applied to. A properly curing poly-silicone product will link its molecules together and become transformed into a slightly different compound (similar process to 2K paint) than what it was originally.
Just because a company calls its product a polymer sealant because it contains polymers doesn't necessarily make that product a true, crosslinking polymer sealant. A sealant and a wax product is not as different as you may think. Most waxes have amino-functional polymers added to them and most 'polymer sealant' products in the market these days are loaded with oils the same way waxes are.
The key factor in a good quality poly-siloxane or sealant's durability is whether or not it contains resins that CURE or CROSSLINK on the surface it is being applied to. A properly curing poly-silicone product will link its molecules together and become transformed into a slightly different compound (similar process to 2K paint) than what it was originally.
Just because a company calls its product a polymer sealant because it contains polymers doesn't necessarily make that product a true, crosslinking polymer sealant. A sealant and a wax product is not as different as you may think. Most waxes have amino-functional polymers added to them and most 'polymer sealant' products in the market these days are loaded with oils the same way waxes are.