Hi,
Newb here Dizzy from all the marketing found online.
Just got a new Civic. Bought it, didn't lease. The previous civic we had was a lease, so I think I washed it twice in 4 years. Noticed tiny rust spots that came out on it when we gave it back after the lease.
So, now that we bought, I think we shoud start to take better care of it than we did with the leased one
So after reading up on the various car waxes and sealants, I decided sealant (polymer) is the way to go. In addition to this, the marketing behind various products was enough to make this chemist dizzy, thus the name. It really does take you for a loop. A big one. Lots of myths (bordering fantasy) out there in both product claims and write-ups of various products by various websites.
...and who knows, I may end up finding this to be a new hobby.
So I have a few newb questions to toss at the forum. Looking for honest answers minus the marketing buzz words and fairytails. And, well, maybe someone can convince me to (being honest here) pay more for certain products.
Down to business.
The one thing that caught my eye was the 2011 Consumer Reports article on their tests of wax and sealants. Press release here:
I was actually going to buy the NFP-80 paste (will use the product number instead of the product name incase that offends someone). But after more digging I found that this might not be for me. More to do with the potential trim staining problem on a new car. Otherwise I wouldn't hesiste to get this one.
I Then looked in the the other highly rated Consumer Reports product, Meguiar's Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0. 4x the price, but, per this forum (at least in one post I found), it seems it good for only 2 months max. I honestly find that pretty low with todays polymer science. But what do I know.
Then I noticed the meguiars advisor website http://www.meguiars.com/en/product-advisor/ it
stated to use the Ultimate Liquid Wax (5x the price) for a new car, and that it's better than the Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0 in terms of protection and durability (how long it lasts).
Questions:
1. Was the Ultimate Liquid Wax used in the consumers report teststing?
If so, why didn't it meet or exceed Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0? Or, is this product new as of the past year?
2. Should more than one application be made after the initial cure time of the first coat?
3. What is the life of this product once applied with one or two coats (asume a Montreal winter where road salt in excess is the norm). Will an application (or two) last 6 months? 3 months? Or does it degrade after an average of one or two months? What are the lab tests for this, if any? Or, real world experience from people here? I prefer hard results, but I guess opinion works as well if none is to be had.
Silicones and the polymers.
Now being a chemist and having worked metal finishing for areospace and miltary, I can tell you the horror stories of military inspectors coming in due to fisheye on a product due to some type of silicon (or other) contamination (which they asked for BTW). But I have no real-world experience in cars.
However, After looking at everything it seems it's impossible to get away from silicones with the shelf products available for consumers. I haven't looked into the Ultimate liquid Wax product, but everything to date shows there is silicon in everything (even when you think it doesn't have it, it's there).
Question (maybe one for the people who do paint touch-ups here):
1. Will there be issues if ever a paint touch-up needs to be done and I end up using the Ultimate Liquid Wax product?
2. I believe the polish step (after washing) is to remove previous chemical coatings. So the silicones hit the bare paint? Again, isn't this an issue?
3. The clear coat bonding polymer. What type of polymer is the Ultimate liquid Wax? Hydrocarbon? Silicone? Other?
The car goes in for rust proofing (Krown) tomorrow. The Rust Proofer recommends waiting 3 weeks before I put any type of coating on it, which make sense. So I have a bit of time for people to recommend stuff and, I guess, convince me.
If there are any meguiars employees around this forum (or lab rats are even better), and they have some spec/tech sheets on anything (even salt spray results, if any exists, or other), I wouldn't mind looking at it. Let's face it, It's not cheap stuff. But, is it good enough to satisfy this dizzy chemist with the marketing hype removed and at 5x the cost?
Feel free to drop links to other forum topics if all this has been asked/answered before.
Guess i'll have some trim questions later on as well. And clay questions, are they all created equal? Clay is clay, right?
TY!
Newb here Dizzy from all the marketing found online.
Just got a new Civic. Bought it, didn't lease. The previous civic we had was a lease, so I think I washed it twice in 4 years. Noticed tiny rust spots that came out on it when we gave it back after the lease.
So, now that we bought, I think we shoud start to take better care of it than we did with the leased one

So after reading up on the various car waxes and sealants, I decided sealant (polymer) is the way to go. In addition to this, the marketing behind various products was enough to make this chemist dizzy, thus the name. It really does take you for a loop. A big one. Lots of myths (bordering fantasy) out there in both product claims and write-ups of various products by various websites.
...and who knows, I may end up finding this to be a new hobby.
So I have a few newb questions to toss at the forum. Looking for honest answers minus the marketing buzz words and fairytails. And, well, maybe someone can convince me to (being honest here) pay more for certain products.
Down to business.
The one thing that caught my eye was the 2011 Consumer Reports article on their tests of wax and sealants. Press release here:
I was actually going to buy the NFP-80 paste (will use the product number instead of the product name incase that offends someone). But after more digging I found that this might not be for me. More to do with the potential trim staining problem on a new car. Otherwise I wouldn't hesiste to get this one.
I Then looked in the the other highly rated Consumer Reports product, Meguiar's Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0. 4x the price, but, per this forum (at least in one post I found), it seems it good for only 2 months max. I honestly find that pretty low with todays polymer science. But what do I know.
Then I noticed the meguiars advisor website http://www.meguiars.com/en/product-advisor/ it
stated to use the Ultimate Liquid Wax (5x the price) for a new car, and that it's better than the Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0 in terms of protection and durability (how long it lasts).
Questions:
1. Was the Ultimate Liquid Wax used in the consumers report teststing?
If so, why didn't it meet or exceed Nxt Generation Tech Wax 2.0? Or, is this product new as of the past year?
2. Should more than one application be made after the initial cure time of the first coat?
3. What is the life of this product once applied with one or two coats (asume a Montreal winter where road salt in excess is the norm). Will an application (or two) last 6 months? 3 months? Or does it degrade after an average of one or two months? What are the lab tests for this, if any? Or, real world experience from people here? I prefer hard results, but I guess opinion works as well if none is to be had.
Silicones and the polymers.
Now being a chemist and having worked metal finishing for areospace and miltary, I can tell you the horror stories of military inspectors coming in due to fisheye on a product due to some type of silicon (or other) contamination (which they asked for BTW). But I have no real-world experience in cars.
However, After looking at everything it seems it's impossible to get away from silicones with the shelf products available for consumers. I haven't looked into the Ultimate liquid Wax product, but everything to date shows there is silicon in everything (even when you think it doesn't have it, it's there).
Question (maybe one for the people who do paint touch-ups here):
1. Will there be issues if ever a paint touch-up needs to be done and I end up using the Ultimate Liquid Wax product?
2. I believe the polish step (after washing) is to remove previous chemical coatings. So the silicones hit the bare paint? Again, isn't this an issue?
3. The clear coat bonding polymer. What type of polymer is the Ultimate liquid Wax? Hydrocarbon? Silicone? Other?
The car goes in for rust proofing (Krown) tomorrow. The Rust Proofer recommends waiting 3 weeks before I put any type of coating on it, which make sense. So I have a bit of time for people to recommend stuff and, I guess, convince me.
If there are any meguiars employees around this forum (or lab rats are even better), and they have some spec/tech sheets on anything (even salt spray results, if any exists, or other), I wouldn't mind looking at it. Let's face it, It's not cheap stuff. But, is it good enough to satisfy this dizzy chemist with the marketing hype removed and at 5x the cost?
Feel free to drop links to other forum topics if all this has been asked/answered before.
Guess i'll have some trim questions later on as well. And clay questions, are they all created equal? Clay is clay, right?
TY!
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