4u2nvinmtl
New member
So as promised, I did a "WG Uber RW" on my "WG Uber Ceramic Coated" Jeep SRT8.
I had mixed results due to a film of tree sap that had adhered to the coating, almost exclusivly on the horisontal panels (hood and roof). The roof has CP Essence topped with CP Reload the hood had CP essence topped with two layers of WG Uber Ceramic Coating.
My Jeep had been exposed to 6 days of non-stop rain and the Maple trees above were in bloom (dropping helicopter seeds and little shells)
Photo:

Close up:

After rinsing the coated hood:

Despite the visible contamination (film of tree sap), I proceeded with the rinseless wash starting on the roof. I wiped gently flipping often but didn`t notice the beading or sheeting return to the roof. As I was drying the roof off section by section I noticed an odd water pattern (looked like ghosting of water marks). It actually was the clean area beading/sheeting VS the sap covered area`s not beading/sheeting water. I picked up another Rinseless soaked towel and redid the roof and it did get a little better but there was still sap on the roof. Once dry it was so thin that it`s not visible. The only way to tell was wiping with a damp cloth and seeing how the water behaved. I`ve never noticed this before so I figured it must be one of those CarPro Reload issues so I moved on to the glass then the hood.
The glass came clean perfectly in one wipe (too many products have been applied to the glass to say for sure what`s the current acting protectant). I could tell it was clean because as I wiped the RW would sheet right off the wiped sections but not the unwiped sections. The front windshield also had no beading/sheeting during the rinse but after one wipe it was back in full force.
I moved on to the hood expecting the same results as the glass but I got results similar to the roof. An odd water beading/sheeting pattern that doesn`t look like any LSP. This is because the RW was only partially cleaning the SAP from the hood. So I redid it 2 more times (3 times total) and it finally started to come clean again (bead and sheet like normal). On the third wipe down I literally scrubbed the hood with a lot of pressure to get the coating clean (very un-autopian). I did not mar or scratch the hood because it was already clean of abrasive debris and my towel was fresh.
The vertical panels were a breeze and came clean after one wipe as they usually would with RW, despite being significantly dirtier (less sap more dirt from driving).
All and all I`ll never RW the coating again if my paint is covered with a tree sap film. I`ll still do RW just not after it`s rained on the paint.
Would I recommend WG Uber RW for WG Uber Coating? Maybe. It really depends on where and how the car is kept. If it`s kept outside under tree that leaves an organic film, then no. If it`s kept out from underneath trees then yes I would recommend WG Uber RW for WG Uber Coated cars.
Note: the pictures of the SAP issue are on my SLR, as my cell phone photos couldn`t capture the issue. I plan to include them in a second review of WG Uber along with more details.
Summary: once the coating has a road grime film or organic tree sap film its harder to clean than conventional LSP (same goes for CarPro Reload and CarPro Dlux).
I had mixed results due to a film of tree sap that had adhered to the coating, almost exclusivly on the horisontal panels (hood and roof). The roof has CP Essence topped with CP Reload the hood had CP essence topped with two layers of WG Uber Ceramic Coating.
My Jeep had been exposed to 6 days of non-stop rain and the Maple trees above were in bloom (dropping helicopter seeds and little shells)
Photo:

Close up:

After rinsing the coated hood:

Despite the visible contamination (film of tree sap), I proceeded with the rinseless wash starting on the roof. I wiped gently flipping often but didn`t notice the beading or sheeting return to the roof. As I was drying the roof off section by section I noticed an odd water pattern (looked like ghosting of water marks). It actually was the clean area beading/sheeting VS the sap covered area`s not beading/sheeting water. I picked up another Rinseless soaked towel and redid the roof and it did get a little better but there was still sap on the roof. Once dry it was so thin that it`s not visible. The only way to tell was wiping with a damp cloth and seeing how the water behaved. I`ve never noticed this before so I figured it must be one of those CarPro Reload issues so I moved on to the glass then the hood.
The glass came clean perfectly in one wipe (too many products have been applied to the glass to say for sure what`s the current acting protectant). I could tell it was clean because as I wiped the RW would sheet right off the wiped sections but not the unwiped sections. The front windshield also had no beading/sheeting during the rinse but after one wipe it was back in full force.
I moved on to the hood expecting the same results as the glass but I got results similar to the roof. An odd water beading/sheeting pattern that doesn`t look like any LSP. This is because the RW was only partially cleaning the SAP from the hood. So I redid it 2 more times (3 times total) and it finally started to come clean again (bead and sheet like normal). On the third wipe down I literally scrubbed the hood with a lot of pressure to get the coating clean (very un-autopian). I did not mar or scratch the hood because it was already clean of abrasive debris and my towel was fresh.
The vertical panels were a breeze and came clean after one wipe as they usually would with RW, despite being significantly dirtier (less sap more dirt from driving).
All and all I`ll never RW the coating again if my paint is covered with a tree sap film. I`ll still do RW just not after it`s rained on the paint.
Would I recommend WG Uber RW for WG Uber Coating? Maybe. It really depends on where and how the car is kept. If it`s kept outside under tree that leaves an organic film, then no. If it`s kept out from underneath trees then yes I would recommend WG Uber RW for WG Uber Coated cars.
Note: the pictures of the SAP issue are on my SLR, as my cell phone photos couldn`t capture the issue. I plan to include them in a second review of WG Uber along with more details.
Summary: once the coating has a road grime film or organic tree sap film its harder to clean than conventional LSP (same goes for CarPro Reload and CarPro Dlux).