Adam's Invisible Undercarriage Spray?

I saw it recently as well. Sounds like a good product. Something that wont streak or look too shiney, but simply add a flat black look. Too bad its super expensive and the price of a gallon size of premium tire dressing. I'll stick with armorall tire foam.
 
I know its pricey and I know of plenty of alternatives; but I'm not happy with them.



Soo...anyone tried it? Not using it in any large quantity, just a couple of mostly garage-queen Mustangs.
 
Brandon1 said:
yeah, I think no-touch seriously wet will stay as my undercarriage shine product. adams simply to expensive



I saw some of that stuff at O'Reillys for the first time the other night. They had two different kinds.. Im not sure which was what.



Anyway, do you spray that stuff everywhere? Or just in the fender wheels? I drive a Jeep, and although its not very big, it would take me forever to cover the underside. Its got 4 skids and a fairly big Uni-Frame along with a beefy suspension.. I know it would take more than one can and that stuff was like $6 per can. :sadwavey:
 
I drive a tundra and it takes about 1can to do my whole undercarriage with a spray on let dry application. It works so great, my tundra undercarriage looks just like new at 60000miles
 
I've got a small bottle enroute and will post some pics when I use it on a black BMW X5 that I'm finishing up.



Adams stuff is generally pretty good. I added the undercarriage spray to a bulk order for their detail spray which is one of the better products in the line.



Totoland Mach
 
Its appears to be identical to Griots Undercarriage Spray. That works very well but a little expensive. I get pretty much the same results from TOL's Grape Dressing.
 
Totoland, let me know what you think of it.



I've been using Meg's Hyper Dressing diluted, but it gets gummy after a while and I have to wash/scrub it out.
 
I use it a lot on BMW's in the shop as a last step when I apply tire dressing. I like the appearance of this product over tire dressing as it looks "OEM"...which is what I strive for in these used cars.



Totoland Mach
 
Here's a BMW before/after shot:



Before



BMW545i_Feb07_FrontWheelWellBefore.jpg




After



BMW545i_Feb07_FrontWheelWellAfter2.jpg




Pic of product



BMW545i_Feb07_FrontWheelWellAfter.jpg




Toto
 
For those of you who've tried this stuff- Is the Adam's "silicon-slippery"? The Griot's Undercarriage Spray is something you don't want on your garage floor and it's so...what it is... that I go to some real lengths to keep it off places where I don't want it. It's even a PIA to get off my hands, let alone the paint of a car.
 
Accumulator said:
For those of you who've tried this stuff- Is the Adam's "silicon-slippery"? The Griot's Undercarriage Spray is something you don't want on your garage floor and it's so...what it is... that I go to some real lengths to keep it off places where I don't want it. It's even a PIA to get off my hands, let alone the paint of a car.



It seems to have a solvent smell and I typicall spray some on an old terry towel rag, then spread it on the fender well. I don't like sprays that go all over the place anyway and this works well for me.



Toto
 
joshtpa- OK, thanks. Might be pretty similar to the Griot's in that regard.



Totoland Mach- Yeah, I almost always apply the Griot's stuff with some kind of applicator as I just don't like spraying products like that either. Atomized stuff tends to go everywhere...
 
I have a sample bottle of it and tried it on my wife's Beetle the other day. Made wheel wells look dark and nice. Had a solvent smell, mineral spirits type I'd say. Made the garage smell.



The smell went away by the end of the day though.
 
Back
Top