<blockquote class='ipsBlockquote' >
<em class='bbc'>Originally posted by FLONI [/i]
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you think you could go into a little more of your routine....like how is this stuff applied..etc.,...thx [/b]</blockquote>
Sometime in September or October I give our the cars the once-over with the Porter Cable polisher. I usually will use the <strong class='bbc'>Meguiar's No. 9 Swirl Remover[/b], followed by the <strong class='bbc'>Meguiars No. 7 Showcar Glaze[/b], and then the <strong class='bbc'>Meguiars No. 20 Polymer Sealant[/b] - usually two coats of the No. 20. I'll put the No. 20 with the Porter Cable, leave it on for an hour, then buff it off by hand with terry cloth or microfiber towels. Then I'll put on a second coat, and wait anouther hour to remove the dried wax. If I'm REALLY ambitious, I'll leave the first coat on overnight and then buff it off in the morning, and then put on the second coat and leave it on a couple of hours. When I follow this routine, I can only do one car a weekend (obviously).
In a previous post, someone said that the No. 20 had a cleaner in it, and that it would remove the first coat. My bottle(s) of No. 20 say nothing about a cleaner, and I'm emailing Meguiars to find out.
When I go to the self serve car wash, or use a commercial touchless car wash, regardless of which one, and how much I spend, they never really get the car completely clean. I'll go home, and in the garage, starting from the roof down, I'll spray the car with <strong class='bbc'>Meguiars Final Inspection[/b] a bit heavily, and with at least four old bath towels, wipe the car down and get it really clean. Then I'll breakout either the <strong class='bbc'>Prolong Waterless Wash & Shine[/b] or the <strong class='bbc'>Amsoil Miracle Wash[/b], and working from the roof down, one panel at a time, repeat the process with some clean towels. Then I'll use either one to clean the wheels as well. As long as the glass was first treated with Rain-X or some similar product, using either the Prolong or the Amsoil product keeps the glass cleaner and lengthens the life of the glass treatment.
In fact, even when I hand wash the cars the rest of the year, I use either of the "waterless" products to clean the glass first before even washing the cars. They are the <strong class='bbc'>only[/b] products I found that cleans all the diesel exhaust and road film crap off glass that accumulates from all the traffic jams and road construction here in the Detroit area (where we only have two seasons - winter and road construction).
The whole process sounds anal, but when I do it, I have fewer swirl marks to remove in the spring, and the No. 20 <strong class='bbc'>seems[/b] to last longer - it keeps beading water. I followed this routine to the -nth degree three years ago, when we moved to a new house, and I had no time to follow my usual spring detailing routine, and the cars were still beading water from the October application of No. 20 right up into July. And we're talking about beads the size of a dime or smaller.