Scottwax said:
You said this:
IF? I have been to his manufacturing plant. Inside. Seen the equipment. Seen all the samples he has in his lab. There is no 'IF' about it.
Limited? If by limited in that he only makes his own product there, then you are right.
Limited chemical engineering background?
Optimum Car Products
Optimum Polymer Technologies, the manufacturer of Optimum Car Care Products, was founded in Memphis, Tennessee, on July 01, 2001 by Dr. David Ghodoussi. Dr. Ghodoussi has over 12 years of experience as an Organic Chemist overseeing research and development focused in polymers and automotive paint formulations. He received his Ph.D. and Master's degrees in Polymer and Organic Chemistry from Oregon State University and an MBA from University of Memphis. He also holds Bachelor's of Science degrees in Chemical Engineering and in Chemistry from the University of California in Santa Barbara.
12 years, and that was in 2001. That would now be 18 years experience.
Sorry Dean, I respect you and your opinions but in this regard you are flat wrong.
OK Scott, so you have some relationship or have other ties to this product or just a loyal following, whichever it is I really do not care. I know of the background, it's public knowledge and as I said: Good for him. It's still limited in that the amount of years as opposed to Menzerna that has been in business for 100 + years. Come on. I'm not trying to discredit Optimum, but let's be realistic here.
What I tried to imply without this becoming some type of P**** match was the fact that one company has 100+ years of experience to a small firm that has up to 20. In that the other larger firm has it's own abrasives and does not have others mfg it's abrasives but in fact creates them from raw materials. It's also well known for it's polishes in other trades as well. But who cares? No one here really gives a rats a$$. What members want is a polish that works well for them, that's all.
It really down't matter who makes it, just so long as it works for that intended purpose.
As I said, you just cannot judge between two different polishes for different applications.
Most will judge 106FF, and that really as most know was developed for "scratch resistant" coatings. Not really designed for standard clearcoat. 106FF also was made for the "line" and not a stand-alone "detail" product, but one used for quick corrections on the mfg line prior to release to Level7 and prep for shipment.
Now, I'm sure Optimum is a wonderful polish. I also don't have time to try every new polish that hits the market. Prior all I used was Meguiars due to the large lineup of different polishes, compounds, glazes etc I could choose from. I even still have the original Detailers line of products back in the 80's.
One day to be fair I'll have to order up a bottle of Optimum polish and give it a try to see for myself what all the fuss is and how loyal the brand is to some.
Anyway Scott, don't try to take the post as a discredit to Optimum.
So, moving right along........
I find that pads (mfg and type) all play a roll in whichever polish you use. Not only pad, but of course the tool used and at what speed, duration etc. all play into this question and answer part. It's best to reach out to the mfg for the correct pad/tool match for the polish.
Regards,
Deanski