DJ Trackie said:
honestly, i tried using SG a couple of times and it was a *****. I did it thin... the only time it worked was when i put it that i can't even see it.
Was there any problem with doing it that thin? It works fine for me that way. Only time SG has ever been tough to buff off was when I deliberately put it on thick to see what all the griping was about. It still came off without much work. I simply don't get what's tough about it :nixweiss
DJ Trackie said:
also.. it doesnt make any sense that two drops could be evenly and effectively spread throughout a whole panel. Common.. use your common sense!
Nobody said to use "two drops" but it takes very little to cover the paint. You're working at "sealing" it at the microscopic level. Common sense tells me that if I can feel the KSG on the panel (it's easy to tell the difference between paint with KSG on it and paint without it), and the beading characteristics are uniform and long lasting, and it stays slick for a long time, then I got enough on there.
RobDon said:
I don't get the whole Klasse SG thing - how can you be putting it on right if you can't see it, you can't be? Anything more than invisible and it's a major pain to get off - great product, must be why you need 3+ coats, to get all the bits you missed - lol! I much prefer something like WG sealant, very easy on/off plus you can actually SEE it. AIO is fine to work with though.
I prefer a number of products over Klasse too, especially UPP. But nothing I've used (never used Zaino) lasts like KSG. One coat, as thin as I apply it, lasts for months. I can assure you that I don't miss any spots

Just gotta be careful and methodical and you'll get complete coverage.
Applying it thicker doesn't help the durability any. All the extra gets buffed off anyhow.
KSG always looks best to me after the fourth coat. But the real reason I layer it is so I can just wash it for a long time without having to redo it unless I feel like it. And the more I build up the sacrificial layer the better.
I usually build up six layers and then just wash it; got over a year out of that on the daily driver, still beading and just starting to sheet in some places when I redid it. That's with *no* QDs and spot-claying at every wash. I apply four-six layers to wheels and they usually don't need redone until I put the snows on for the winter. Even the back sides stay nice and clean. For me, it's convenient to spend the time layering and then not do it again. For others that might not be the way to go.
Sheesh, I sound like some kind of apologist for KSG, and I don't really even like how it looks! But it lasts an incredibly long time and I always find it very easy to use. Putting another layer on the minivan is no big deal at all (just did it yesterday) and that's not a small vehicle. If you don't like it then cool, there are plenty of other products and I only use it on one of our vehicles myself. And I don't blame pros for using something different, I would too. But some of these posts sounded like they were implying that it doesn't work unless you use some difficult method or that those of us who use it don't know what we're talking about.