Cure Time and Polymer Sealants

EdLancer

New member
How do most of you use a time curable sealant on a customer's car and tell them to come back in a week to layer it with a LSP ?
 
How do most of you use a time curable sealant on a customer's car and tell them to come back in a week to layer it with a LSP ?
 
The general rule for a sealant's cure time is 24 hours, unless you're dealing with Zaino. Read my reply to your other post. :)
 
The general rule for a sealant's cure time is 24 hours, unless you're dealing with Zaino. Read my reply to your other post. :)
 
Cure and haze or set time is different. I usually let them know I would prefer if they could avoid contact with water for 24 hrs. Once the Poly has "cured" your long gone anyway, and no further treatment is necessary. The Poly is your LSP.....
 
Cure and haze or set time is different. I usually let them know I would prefer if they could avoid contact with water for 24 hrs. Once the Poly has "cured" your long gone anyway, and no further treatment is necessary. The Poly is your LSP.....
 
Sounds like a new marketing angle. Maybe waiting a week and then applying a last step product could become a good way to get the customer to pay more for the entire detail. Instead of completing the job all in one day you simply explain to the customer that it's a requirement that they make another appointment to have the last step applied to their vehicle. Of course the additional appointment would also come with an additional charge. Now that's something to think about.
 
Sounds like a new marketing angle. Maybe waiting a week and then applying a last step product could become a good way to get the customer to pay more for the entire detail. Instead of completing the job all in one day you simply explain to the customer that it's a requirement that they make another appointment to have the last step applied to their vehicle. Of course the additional appointment would also come with an additional charge. Now that's something to think about.
 
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