Long Term Wax Test. Collinite, Lusso, Griots, DoDo

A belated question about the Meg`s Detailer line X-press Spray Wax:
Does it "add" any gloss to the existing waxes, (IE, Does one of the test waxes appear glossier than the others) and how long does the beading effect last?

I am just curious; did your test vehicle sit outside for most of this test? I am assuming that your Florida (?) sun and early spring temps are already breaking down the carnauba wax after 8 weeks.

I noticed no difference in the entire test panel after application of Meg`s Detailer line X-press Spray Wax, other than the spray wax`s own gloss and minor filling.

Yes, the car is outside 24-7, Florida.

It`s worth mentioning that I would typically get better performance than shown because I`d sporadically be using something like QD+ or X-press during the 8 weeks period. On this test, I used ONR once during the 8 weeks.
 
Wow, depressing to see that failure rate at least in the beading department. The big question I guess since there is no definitive evidence "Is the protection still there when the beading is gone". At least on the 915 side 2 Months is a long way from 9. I sure hope the 476 does better.

Dave
 
Huh, even given the conditions of the test that`s sure not the kind of longevity I`d want these days (with no special measures), but I bet it`s fine for you "like to wax" people.

WaxAddict- Still can`t get ya to include FK1000P, huh? Sorry...couldn`t resist :D I never tried the 915 as the 476S is (supposedly) much more durable, and I retired *that* as soon as I`d tried the FK.

If you decide to do the "underlying product" and/or layering, there`ll be a need to figure out a good methodology...people who do things differently from how *I* do them get results that`re very different from mine.
 
I personally would skip the glaze and test the wax/sealants on their own merit. I still have a hard time with all those products dieing around the same period. Maybe you are right and the pollen left a coating over the waxes>>>>>>>>maybe?

Dave
 
Oh, and time for another test! :rockon Hmmmm, the other day I was thinking...

... glaze underneath a wax vs. no glaze (does the glaze affect longevity?)
... 3 coats of a wax vs. 1 coat (see if layering wax is a waste of time)
... WGDGPS vs. 476 vs. Soft99

Great idea!
 
... WaxAddict- Still can`t get ya to include FK1000P, huh? Sorry...couldn`t resist ...
Yeah Accum, I should get some. Too busy buying products I`ve never heard of like Beauty Shine, Ardex, and Mitchel & King.

... I still have a hard time with all those products dieing around the same period ...
Me too, David, totally, but the truth can`t be denied. Now let`s talk about what could have happened...

... Maybe you are right and the pollen left a coating over the waxes ...
Maybe, but maybe not so much as a coating, or a shearing effect like I said earlier, but maybe the pollen dissolved the wax? I`ve been reading online, and there`s plenty of talk that pollen damages paint due to scratching, but I also read that pollen is acidic. Water activates the acid in pollen. We had pollen in early March, then rain, then about a week of the car just sitting there baking in the sun. Something has to explain the 915 going from "easily detectable" to "nothing" in 1.5 weeks.
 
Nice test. I`m not surprised at the results. I get pretty similar results in S. Georgia. The heat just kills waxes. I`m not sure the layering test would prove anything. I`m pretty much convinced that the solvents in waxes will remove the previous layer negating any positive results. How about a wax over a sealant test, since the solvents shouldn`t remove the sealant? Maybe do a sealant after it cures 4, 8, and 12 hours to see if cure time effects durability.
 
Pollen would sometimes appear to kill Collinite for me, but never did anything significant to FK1000P even when I left it on there for a long time through numerous rains/etc.

.. I`m pretty much convinced that the solvents in waxes will remove the previous layer negating any positive results. How about a wax over a sealant test, since the solvents shouldn`t remove the sealant? Maybe do a sealant after it cures 4, 8, and 12 hours to see if cure time effects durability.


Noting how YMMV and that there are a whole lotta factors...IME it`s easy enough to test whether layering works and with sufficient time between applications and applying subsequent layers very gently I`ve seldom had the "like removes like"/solvent-action remove previously applied layers to the extent that it rendered the layering futile (exception- I saw no durability benefit from layering Souveran even when I spit-shined it). Heh heh, I sure wouldn`t bother putting on another layer of [anything] unless I were certain that there`d be a functional benefit.

E.g., I know about that micro-level measurement of attempts to layer Collinite that "proved" (scare-quotes intentional) it did NOT layer, but if that`s the case then how did the areas I did with more applications keep beading/staying slick/behaving like they were waxed so much longer?

E.g.#2, when FK1000p layering goes haywire it causes pseudo-holograms from the solvent action. But even then (including after I`ve buffed away those pseudo-holograms) those areas "behave like they`re still waxed" longer so my interpretation is that the solvent action is not sufficient to fully remove the previously-applied product. And as I keep posting, when FK1000P is layered successfully it lasts for an incredibly long time..at least for me. Much longer than just one application, by a very significant margin.

I`m assuming that everyone here accepts that products like KSG layer, right?
 
...

... I`m assuming that everyone here accepts that products like KSG layer, right?

I think sealants, acrylic or otherwise, should layer, because you just don`t need the solvents for suspension that you need with carnauba. I think that a purely natural wax might not layer, just like your Souveran didn`t layer. But, a lot of "waxes" have polymers and *should* benefit from a second coat. In hybrid wax/sealant products, perhaps the carnauba is there for looks, so maybe we`re just layering the polymer content of "waxes" and simply using the carnauba content as an appearance enhancer, so who cares if subsequent coats are erasing the existing carnauba - the solvent content is staying in-tact.
 
WaxAddict- Yeah, I don`t know from the chemistry behind this stuff but I always figure that sealants, and especially acrylics, will layer. Do wish it made a bigger diff performance-wise with some of `em though.

Heh, another carnauba that shouldn`t layer but always did for me (only used the Pre-VOC version though) was Malm`s liquid. It wasn`t some hybrid, just a liquid, carnaube-based wax very similar to the liquid version of M26. But it absulutely *did* layer, had to strip it off after a while as it became a "wax buildup" just like in the floorcare commercials.

AFAIK the only Autopian who`s currently using it is JustJesus, and I haven`t heard much from him other than how hydrophobic it (still, post-VOC) is.

Eh, IMO when it comes to layering it`s probably best to try stuff for oneself given the YMMV thing, some of my experiences sure surprised me and I`d thought `em through pretty well beforehand.
 
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