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MDRX8 said:I like my Vintage. Would I buy again? YES....
TH0001 said:How about you call a carnuaba chemist... Or ANY independent source...
Also I have provided a 'how' or 'why'.
Why, because modern VOC solvents will not allow it...
The research is easy to do and independent sources are easy enough to find, I personally think you have avoided the research because deep down you don't really want to know that you paid 2200 dollars (or whatever) for a wax that was spun off of Meguiars.
Let this be a lesson, if you are going to purchase something expensive, before spending money do your research. Otherwise you might find yourself defying logic and science to justify a purchase that most people (possibly yourself) cannot tell a difference.
Perhaps I am wrong, but I remember one of Zymol's claims being 100% natural or something similar.
You have proven to me (something that I know, btw) that all NATURAL carnuaba is yellow. So they bleach or add montan wax (or the newest technique btw is micro graining) to make the wax look whiter.
So there are different ways to make carnuaba whiter, but still no such thing as natural white carnauba.
Then again I am assuming that you also feel that paint needs to 'eat' and be fed. I guess I could drum up a couple painters, chemists, and who ever to tell you thats not true either...
I don't mean to come across as rude and I understand that it just how blunt comes across.
In the end if you are happy with your purchase and you 'see' the difference, then more power to you and more power to anybody who is.
It is one of the better looking waxes I have used, although the durabillity is rather poor in my experience.
If you want scientific proof then you will have to do your own research and I can provide you with some good numbers to get you started but I will not reveal my sources publically and would ask that you wouldn't share them as well.
TH0001 said:Always a good read, what happens if you actually make something that is 70% carnauba...
Mysteries of the Carnauba Trade Pt 2, Fun with weight - Detailing World
TH0001 said:Not true at all...
In Concours it states that the product is 90% white (doesn't exist, I guess they meant 90% of it is either a) micro refined b) mixed with montan wax c) bleached) and 50-some percent carnauba by 'volume'.
Not wet volume. Not dry volume... .just volume.
Picus said:Everyone has an agenda, Todd, not just Zymol.
lbls1 said:It appears that we are at an impass on this issue. We won't really get a chance to resolve our difference in opinion, but let me just voice my disappointment with a few highlights.
1. There was not a necessity on my part to do any investigating research into a claim made by anyone. I have two sources of information to choose from. One wax maker with 30 years of experience, a worldwide market and customer acclaim, and the presence of their products in the market which appears to have built a solid customer base thru-out their tenure of being in this business. This company has made an acclamation about the quality and validity of their products, and to this day remain as a respected brand name that (to my knowledge) has not been sanctioned for fraud or misleading advertising.
The other source of infomation came from a challenge to the claim of the contents made by yourself, which to my knowledge has not been substantiated by any referenced sources or a concise explanation of any of the points that was raised. To my knowledge I am not aware of any wax product or research that you've done yourself or in conjunction with the several wax makers or suppliers that you quoted in your earlier responses. You did not share who those sources were, and what their experience or background were in relation to this topic, or any information from these people that could've aided this discussion.
Thus, given these two sources, and in addition one or two similar wax products made by other wax manufacturers that have a similar wax formulation to the subject wax manufacturer (Zymol), which source would one tend to believe? The experienced wax vendor with a proven track record, or a bulletin board participant with inconclusive statements and insufficient supporting information?
2. In addition, several requests for supporting information to the charges made by you were either denied or ignored for reasons that are unknown.
3. After a lengthy article by yourself, you made an admission that you didn't know how Zymol measured their wax or came up with their percentage for their wax ingredient. You also didn't discuss why the percentages stated by zymol were a 'Scientific Impossiblity.'
Given all of this, why would one wonder how someone would believe one side and not the other? Answer: Because one side has tangible evidence, that being the product and reputation, while the other side hasn't shown any evidence to its claim.
Ok not finished yet: If this was just a discussion based on your experience and being that the experience was as a hyperbole, then I can understand that. That is not a problem at all. In fact, that is how a lot of us learn about products and techniques. The issue occured when that experience was (to me) trying to be posed as truth and absolute law. It was this instance that I demanded to see and hear the evidence of such law.
But...at any rate, the discussion was at least interesting, if not informative