SuperBee364
New member
The first and last time I used Meguiar's #7 Show Car Glaze, Ronald Reagan was in office.
I had the worst time wrestling with this stuff. I just could not seem to get it to do anything other than streak, haze, and just look yucky.
Two weeks ago I found myself in the local Autozone (another place I'm not normally allowed to go without adult supervision) to buy a windshield chip repair kit. (Totally off topic, but those kits, at eleven bucks each, are a *great* way to save yourself some cash over having a "pro" repair your windshield).
I figured that since I was saving myself thirty some odd bucks by doing my own windshield repair, I should probably have a look at the Megs stuff they had. I was specifically trying to find the new stuff: Scratch X 2.0, UC, etc. They didn't have any of that, but they did have my old nemesis: #7. So I bought a bottle.
I finally got a chance to try it out on a section of my hood yesterday. Either I've gotten a lot smarter over the last twenty years (very doubtful), or Meg's has reformulated #7 and made it easier to use. Just by following the directions on the bottle, I was able to get fantastic results. Since my car needs absolutely zero correction this year, I spent thirty minutes jeweling one half of my hood. The reult, if I do say so myself, was stunning; the PO85RD and red Edge pad had my hood looking *perfect*. I was thinking there was *no way* that any glaze was gonna be able to make my polishing look better.
As my wife would say, "Wrong". Removing the number seven residue revealed what I would consider to be the perfect surface. It had all of those properties we detailers chase: depth, glow, gloss, wetness, reflectivity, and *flake* like you can't believe. Wanting to lock that look in, I grabbed my Vintage baggy (the remnants of my cube which appears to be lost in Zymol's HQ) and waxed the section I had number seven'd. After removing the Vintage haze, I was rewarded with yet again another improvement: the paint looks like it's an inch thick.
Now I've been at this paint polishing thing since I was sixteen. I'm now forty one. I've seen my fair share of good looking paint surfaces. I've also been going crazy buying, testing, experimenting with a bunch of different glazes, LSP's, etc. So I'm not exactly a newb. Now having established what I hope is some semblance of credibility, I gotta say: it's the best looking paint I have *ever* seen.
I have no idea how much number seven will conceal defects or holos, but the MSDS sheet does say it has kaolin clay in it, which is primarily a filler, so it should provide some filling. If it does do a decent job of concealing, I could see number seven being a black car owner's nirvana.
I've read a bunch about number seven, and the general consensus is that it has about zero durability. Hopefully, locking it under a layer of a good carnauba will prevent the number seven from washing away after the first rain or wash.
Sorry guys, but no pictures. I just could not get the camera to do justice to the true appearance. The only thing I can suggest is giving it a shot yourself. Number seven is *cheap*. Go grab a bottle, prep (polish) a section of your car, use the number seven as per the instructions, and put a bit of a good 'nuba over the top of it. Then come back here and tell us (or if you have the photography skills that I dont, show us some pics) how it turned out.
I'd really like to hear how well number seven perfoms on paint that hasn't been corrected just to get an idea of what it's capable of doing.
This year, I'm dividing my car up into different test sections. It'll be interesting to see how number seven/vintage ages over the warm months. I'm hoping that the number seven won't negatively affect the Vintage's already luke warm durability. Oh, almost forgot to mention.. the "trade secret" oils in number seven make carnauba waxes extremely easy to apply and remove. Vintage isn't the most user friendly wax to apply/remove, and any help in that department is most welcome. Number seven made it easy to apply it evenly and thin. I used about half the amount of wax I normally do.
One test section is going to have number seven under a layer of 476 SD. 476 is a PITA to me. I always have trouble getting it on thin enough, which results in it being a total pain to remove. It'll be interesting to see if the number seven makes 476 easier to apply/remove.
OK, I'll quit rambling now... time to go jewel up another section of my car.
I had the worst time wrestling with this stuff. I just could not seem to get it to do anything other than streak, haze, and just look yucky.
Two weeks ago I found myself in the local Autozone (another place I'm not normally allowed to go without adult supervision) to buy a windshield chip repair kit. (Totally off topic, but those kits, at eleven bucks each, are a *great* way to save yourself some cash over having a "pro" repair your windshield).
I figured that since I was saving myself thirty some odd bucks by doing my own windshield repair, I should probably have a look at the Megs stuff they had. I was specifically trying to find the new stuff: Scratch X 2.0, UC, etc. They didn't have any of that, but they did have my old nemesis: #7. So I bought a bottle.
I finally got a chance to try it out on a section of my hood yesterday. Either I've gotten a lot smarter over the last twenty years (very doubtful), or Meg's has reformulated #7 and made it easier to use. Just by following the directions on the bottle, I was able to get fantastic results. Since my car needs absolutely zero correction this year, I spent thirty minutes jeweling one half of my hood. The reult, if I do say so myself, was stunning; the PO85RD and red Edge pad had my hood looking *perfect*. I was thinking there was *no way* that any glaze was gonna be able to make my polishing look better.
As my wife would say, "Wrong". Removing the number seven residue revealed what I would consider to be the perfect surface. It had all of those properties we detailers chase: depth, glow, gloss, wetness, reflectivity, and *flake* like you can't believe. Wanting to lock that look in, I grabbed my Vintage baggy (the remnants of my cube which appears to be lost in Zymol's HQ) and waxed the section I had number seven'd. After removing the Vintage haze, I was rewarded with yet again another improvement: the paint looks like it's an inch thick.
Now I've been at this paint polishing thing since I was sixteen. I'm now forty one. I've seen my fair share of good looking paint surfaces. I've also been going crazy buying, testing, experimenting with a bunch of different glazes, LSP's, etc. So I'm not exactly a newb. Now having established what I hope is some semblance of credibility, I gotta say: it's the best looking paint I have *ever* seen.
I have no idea how much number seven will conceal defects or holos, but the MSDS sheet does say it has kaolin clay in it, which is primarily a filler, so it should provide some filling. If it does do a decent job of concealing, I could see number seven being a black car owner's nirvana.
I've read a bunch about number seven, and the general consensus is that it has about zero durability. Hopefully, locking it under a layer of a good carnauba will prevent the number seven from washing away after the first rain or wash.
Sorry guys, but no pictures. I just could not get the camera to do justice to the true appearance. The only thing I can suggest is giving it a shot yourself. Number seven is *cheap*. Go grab a bottle, prep (polish) a section of your car, use the number seven as per the instructions, and put a bit of a good 'nuba over the top of it. Then come back here and tell us (or if you have the photography skills that I dont, show us some pics) how it turned out.
I'd really like to hear how well number seven perfoms on paint that hasn't been corrected just to get an idea of what it's capable of doing.
This year, I'm dividing my car up into different test sections. It'll be interesting to see how number seven/vintage ages over the warm months. I'm hoping that the number seven won't negatively affect the Vintage's already luke warm durability. Oh, almost forgot to mention.. the "trade secret" oils in number seven make carnauba waxes extremely easy to apply and remove. Vintage isn't the most user friendly wax to apply/remove, and any help in that department is most welcome. Number seven made it easy to apply it evenly and thin. I used about half the amount of wax I normally do.
One test section is going to have number seven under a layer of 476 SD. 476 is a PITA to me. I always have trouble getting it on thin enough, which results in it being a total pain to remove. It'll be interesting to see if the number seven makes 476 easier to apply/remove.
OK, I'll quit rambling now... time to go jewel up another section of my car.
