Budget, soooo... which ones make you smile the most, along with fun to use... total package? Considering price (CQ?) and without (Kamikaze?).
For my personal cars, Kamikaze for sure. Not only does it `work` best for me but I kinda dig the overall `Kaizen` theory they promote (
https://www.kamikaze-collection.com/anti-aging-theory ) and obviously a fan of the US vendor Esoteric who has been an immeasurable help to me over the years. I can always get answers from them and I generally get to see and talk to the inventor of Kamikaze once a year or so at their Open House.
All the intangible stuff aside, the stuff just meets all my needs:
- Great water behavior/self cleaning characteristics
- The flexibility to kinda tailor what I perceive to be the final appearance based on the coatings I choose as well as durability
--- Miyabi: Stupid easy to use, more of a sharp reflective gloss, 2 layers get ya about 18-24 months. Can generally apply to 1 or 2 panels before leveling/buffing off.
--- ISM 1.0: Deeper, wax like glow. A 1 layer coating, doesn’t layer well on top of itself. Really accentuates metallics, very polarizing effect on them. 24-36 months expected longevity. A bonus to ISM is that it’s the best trim coating around. Generally use 15-20ml on paint, do the trim w the rest. Best to apply to single panel and then level/buff.
--- ISM 2.0: Pretty much same properties as ISM 1.0 (and it think Zipang has it`s roots in ISM 2.0) but a bit greater durability and a candy-gloss. More of a PIA to apply, not crazy difficult but need to work in smaller sections, not by panels.
--- Zipang: Candy gloss, limited ability to reduce light scratches/marring. Don’t like to refer to it as ‘self healing’ as that can lead to unfulfilled and unrealistic expectations. Applies pretty much like ISM 1.0 but wanna take a bit more care for even, consistent application…no cross hatch application so gotta be a bit more conscientious but still overall very easy. Rated up to 5 years but ya know how that goes...we`ll see.
--- Infinity Wax: A hybrid wax/glass coating wax. Lends a nice ‘relaxed high gloss’ look to the surface; relatively durable, fun beading, easy to apply. Kinda a nice thing to do that’ll add a bit of protection and also lets you enjoy en easy, therapeutic waxing while being entirely compatible w/ underlying coating. Fun stuff.
--- Toss in Overcoat that has the craziest water behavior I`ve seen as a topper/maintenance product and it`s the complete package w/ a single vendor
It`s really kinda funny (or probably weird, I guess) how finding `your` coating gives you a better overall feeling about the car it`s on. When I had SPS Graphene, which was a very good coating (graphene or not) I just didn`t like my daily driver as much as when it had Miyabi/ISM on it for 42k miles :shrug:
The main thing is it`s ability to work in both scenarios I use cars in:
- 1. It looks great and stays remarkably nice looking on our well-maintained `toy` cars, makes them very easy to care for
- 2. It works equally as well on cars I ignore for a while, even over the long NE Ohio Winter. Do the standard kinda decon-carpet-bombing-clean-up and good to go in Spring. It appears that some coatings don`t like to be ignored and if`n ya neglect maintaining them, they suffer very quickly in terms of effectiveness. They may be revitalized with more frequent decon washes but I only wanna do that once a year in Spring, too lazy to do that more often to keep a coating in tip-top shape.
- 3. I`ve never had any permanent staining, water spots or other things I`m afraid of while using it despite a few of our cars being parked outside for extended periods of time on a heavily wooded lot.
I really liked 22ple as well, although it`s kinda $$ too; it`s the best `fire and forget` coating I`ve used that is still somewhat reasonably cost effective if ya snatch it up during a sale but after such success w/ HPC, VXPRO2 was a downer for me and getting a hold of the mfg is a real PITA; half the time the information they do provide is sketchy (i.e. Finitura will increase scratch resistance
500%)
I`m gonna really give Cquartz UK 3.0 and TiO2 a workout this year as they`ve been very good to me in the past, notably UK 3 + Gliss over the past 15 or so months, 12k miles in less than ideal situations/maintenance.
Have you tried Feynlab or Angelwax yet?
I had Feynlab Ceramic on our 2004 Corvette for a month or so back in Summer 2017, it was OK. I did a new work van in Ceramic V2 + Topcoat in 2018 I believe and it`s still doing OK. It`s pretty good stuff and reasonably priced and everyone from Feynlab I`ve talked to has been just great but it has a very sharp, brilliant gloss to it, kinda looks like Zaino to me and not really a fan of that look.
I`d imagine the Angelwax stuff may be nice (just used their `Redemption` fine polish to finish out my black Accord last weekend before coating) but I kinda got tired of the whole `Angelwax is the greatest thing in the world` advocates so not likely to give that a go. I`ve tried a lot of coatings and for the most part they`re all good and I can`t imagine anything Angelwax would be any great leap forward, likely just another good coating in a sea of them.
Aside from the functionality of a product, who really knows why you like some things better than others; lotsa people like cooked green peas but get near me w/ a spoonful of those nasty little green orbs and I`m gonna puke...who knows why, it just is what it is. Kamikaze was the 3rd coating I ever used (October 2016); first was WG Uber Ceramic and 2nd was McKees Paint Coating V1 (which was surprisingly good for what it was, more so than V2 for me). I spent the next bunch of years trying to `beat` Kamikaze and although 22ple HPC came close, in the end it just didn`t quite make me happy. Objective testing with gloss meters and other instrumentation aside, what I use has to make me happy in a variety of areas and nothing has done that like Kamikaze....for whatever reason. Perhaps it`s time trying to figure out `why` and just be happy I`ve found something that does.
For now...
