Midnight Sun

I'm not sure about the great smell (just smells like wax) but I think MS looks really nice. I've used a P21s and Tropi-care nuba and I think the wetness and warm tint it gave the red on my TA was better than the other two.
 
I've used MS by itself on my daily driver, and for the first time ever, white actually had depth!

I also use MS on top of BFWD on customer cars, and it consistently pops.

Two thumbs up, and I'm an old guy who has used almost everything....
 
I'm not sure about the great smell (just smells like wax) but I think MS looks really nice. I've used a P21s and Tropi-care nuba and I think the wetness and warm tint it gave the red on my TA was better than the other two.
Smells like maple syrup to me MS has a great smell.
 
ok im a mobile bizz and most of my car are outside can this product on hot serfice?

I have used it on a warm car in the sun and it was fine, but I had to work very small sections. You do not want to let let it haze on the paint's surface, which on a black car in the Florida sun is going to take seconds.

The reason is Midnight Sun has an extremely high carnauba content (actual carnauba by wet volume vs. some number that is impossible to formulate). PBMG nor CMA ever quoted carnauba percentage, because a waxes true ability is far more than the actual amount of carnauba in the product. A waxes performance is a combination of the wax(s), oils, solvents, and in this case polymers as well.

Because Midnight Sun has so much carnauba (and thus a lower solvent to carnauba ratio) once it hardens it will be very difficult to remove. If you have ever seen or felt pure carnauba wax it is extremely hard (like concrete). Once those solvents flash off you are left with an extremely hard paste on the surface that will be very difficult to remove. Midnight Sun is carefully blended with premium grade oils that slow the solvent from flashing (why it is so easy to apply and remove) but it could be difficult on an extremely hot surface.
 
I have used MS by itself and its nice. Applies very easily and has nice jetting on dark colored cars.

In my opinion however, where this wax shines and has no equal, is on top of BD on dark metallic paints. This is the true reason why I own Blackfire "wet ice over fire" and is the only piece of kit used on this type of color car. The combination of deep, glowing black with unreal levels of flake pop is just astounding.

I have tried many other waxes and have several I use depending on the color of the car. For instance, I feel Dodo Banana Armour is much better on warm mid tones and gives much more to reds and yellows, where as on solid black I prefer Swissvax Mystery.

Hand me a car in nighthawk black pearl however... and its will get the BF treatment and look stunning!
 
No argument to MS being easy to work with, actually a pleasure. This is the highest end wax that I own. I used it on black metallic flake paint and it kicked it up a notch. I am under the general belief that all products look good and its mostly technique, but there was a noticeable difference with MS. I also have BFWD and have not yet tried it under the MS. When it gets warmer, I'll slap it on there and I have very high expectations.
 
Maybe I'm being sucked in by the hype on MS/BFWD but I used the Blackfire compound and polish on black BMW paint and was really happy with the end result. I have WG sealant and Fuzion already and there may no real difference between the two but I would really like to try these based on what I got with the other Blackfire stuff I've used so far.
 
This is one of the waxes that I really want to get - it's a shame that I just couldn't find enough items to add to my cart to get the free sample pot during the recent Christmas sales. I'm really looking forward to the release of the new products, so I can buy the 3 oz jar.
 
multiple coats of MS vs multiple coats of Fuzion on black

thoughts?

I've got to stop reading these posts. I already know that 95% of the look is from the polishing but that doesn't seem to stop me from wanting to try this stuff...
 
I recently got BFMS in a trade and will be using it tomorrow on a black GMC Terrain. Plan doing a near (+ - 90%) complete correction, following Collinite 845, then BFMS. I'm be sure to post up an article when I'm done.

I can't wait to try my first Blackfire product.
 
Hey Jim,

BlackFire Midnight Sun was my first experience with this family of product. I was pleasantly surprised to see how effortlessly it went on with a yellow foam pad.

I'm really an advocate for applying sealants and waxes with a dual action polisher and appropriate pad but this glided on so nicely I think this will be a hand applied product. :bigups
 
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I'm really an advocate for applying sealants and waxes with a dual action polisher and appropriate pad but this glided on so nicely I think this will be a hand applied polish. :bigups

Yes, it does go on beautifully by hand. I put it on by hand and it was a cinch just as everyone said.
 
Midnight Sun is definitely one of the products on my carnuaba "to try" list. I used the BFWD for the first time & was super happy with the results (and the product)!
 
Hey Jim,

BlackFire Midnight Sun was my first experience with this family of product. I was pleasantly surprised to see how effortlessly it went on with a yellow foam pad.

I'm really an advocate for applying sealants and waxes with a dual action polisher and appropriate pad but this glided on so nicely I think this will be a hand applied product. :bigups

I agree Bobby. Quite a pleasure to apply by hand. I tend to use my PC a lot for LSP's. The WOWO waxes are nice to bring that "hand waxed" allure to a vehicle without killing yourself.
 
I have used it on a warm car in the sun and it was fine, but I had to work very small sections. You do not want to let let it haze on the paint's surface, which on a black car in the Florida sun is going to take seconds.

The reason is Midnight Sun has an extremely high carnauba content (actual carnauba by wet volume vs. some number that is impossible to formulate). PBMG nor CMA ever quoted carnauba percentage, because a waxes true ability is far more than the actual amount of carnauba in the product. A waxes performance is a combination of the wax(s), oils, solvents, and in this case polymers as well.

Because Midnight Sun has so much carnauba (and thus a lower solvent to carnauba ratio) once it hardens it will be very difficult to remove. If you have ever seen or felt pure carnauba wax it is extremely hard (like concrete). Once those solvents flash off you are left with an extremely hard paste on the surface that will be very difficult to remove. Midnight Sun is carefully blended with premium grade oils that slow the solvent from flashing (why it is so easy to apply and remove) but it could be difficult on an extremely hot surface.

Thank You Todd for the explenation of the MS make-up.
Very interesting:bigups
 
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