What's the difference in these two? (Meg's #3 & #7)

BigJimZ28 said:
EX-P is one of the few that will bond on top of stuff like that

I have even used it on top of RMG with no problems



still one of my favorate combos on black

proper prep, RMG, EX-P, Natty's Blue



I thought only EX was ok for on top of 'nuba...that's ok, I hate EX-P anyway, it repeats on me.
 
Accumulator said:
[Insert cynical comment here regarding what Meguiar's cutomer-service people *currently* say #7 is made for, and why ;) ]



The whole "how can a LSP be durable if applied over something that's not durable" question sorta intrigues me, and no, I don't have an answer :nixweiss



I just report the news. LOL



I certainly won't argue with what some have tried and get good results from. I have not tried anything over #7. Maybe I will.



I've learned a lot from the forum that works against conventional wisdom. I am here to learn as well. If it works, it works. I don't need the extra step so I just polish/seal (sometimes a wax topper).



Meg also told me #7 alone would not seal fresh paint. What do you think of that?



:spot
 
I will just add a little note here for future readers....



Note that when I got into all of this detailing "stuff" I would use Meguiars products to make my vehciles look "nice." My eye is trained for this look and I still prefer the handsome, signature Meguiars look. I eventually learned the whole line of products and they were my "baseline" products in the world of detailing.



^^I just note that because you should know that I am a bit biased based on my nostalgic feelings for the products. :D



I think that all of the pure polishes mentioned in this thread have a somewhat similar look. They will make paint darker with their "trade secret oils" and I like that on *most* cars. As accumulator stated, the #5 is just about as easy to use as any LSP. The #3/#81 while still a bit more user-friendly can definitely give you a bit of trouble on some paints if you do not take the time to figure them out. If you are using #7, you should really take the time to find the post where Mike Phillips expalins how and why he uses it.



Having said that whole bag of useless wind--if I am going to a show tomorrow I would prep my car to a swirl-free finish, apply #7, and then apply two coats of NXT2.0. I just feel that in *my eyes* (looks alone here), nothing quite makes a car "show car ready" like that combo. Lots of variables to discuss here, but that's my take.
 
Hahhaaa I never ment for this thread to blow up the way it has... LOL!



Glad I asked.

As for the amount of steps, I don't mind hooking up my personal car. Not wasting anything ;)

Let's see my steps.

wash

clay

SSR2.5

SSR1

Klasse

Meg's #7

Meg's 26

EX-P

and maybe tomorrow a quick coat of #26 again for the hell of it.. not that it needs it. I over do many things :P but the women love it :har har:
 
I have been known to take and put 2 drops of #7 on my polishing pad along with my LSP, Fuzion, PS, or Vintage. Leaves a nice wet look finish. I have been told by McGuiars that none of their pure polishes 3, 5, 7, 81 will not remove the LSP
 
MDRX8- I'm not surprised that #7/LSP mix works well...never tried it though at least not that I can recall. But then, heh heh, I can't recally a few things from the '70s so who knows :chuckle:



The solvent action of #7, let alone the friction from the application/buffing, might be too much for Souveran. I used #7 to prep before re-waxing many times and it cleaned off not-fresh LSPs for me, but I guess I was being kinda aggressive about it.



ebpcivicsi- Yeah, what you said :xyxthumbs Except that now that I'm old and lazy I'd use #5 or #3 instead of #7 and tell myself "good enough" ;)



biolink- Yeah, I wasn't :argue with you or anything and this wouldn't be the first time I had, uhm...issues with something a Meg's rep said (I once went so far as to complain to Mike Phillips about some of the goofy stuff one of their guys told me).



And yeah, #7 is *absolutely safe* for fresh repaints. I'd sure use #5 instead, but #7 won't hurt anything. Just don't go rubbing too hard in an effort to get it buffed just right (that's why I'd go with #5 instead, it's Accumulator-proof).



rydawg- I hadn't used #7 for ages either but around 2005 I had (short-term) ownership of an old Jag. It had really crappy ss lacquer and the #7 was *just* the ticket. I used a ton of the stuff on it- first to pretreat the dried/oxidized paint and then to spruce it up enough that it wasn't too embarassing to show to prospective buyers.



The smell of the stuff was a real trip down memory lane, but so was the hassle of getting it buffed perfectly (on a dark color where every streak was obvious, and the compromised finish lead to a lot of such issues).
 
Given the smell of Gold Class and the fact that it has polishing oils in it I wouldn't doubt that it's something along the lines of "a couple drops" of #7 mixed in with it.
 
Accumulator said:
biolink- Yeah, I wasn't :argue with you or anything and this wouldn't be the first time I had, uhm...issues with something a Meg's rep said (I once went so far as to complain to Mike Phillips about some of the goofy stuff one of their guys told me).



And yeah, #7 is *absolutely safe* for fresh repaints. I'd sure use #5 instead, but #7 won't hurt anything. Just don't go rubbing too hard in an effort to get it buffed just right (that's why I'd go with #5 instead, it's Accumulator-proof)......





The smell of the stuff was a real trip down memory lane,...



No worries.



I tried using #7 with a PC and the result was similar to chewing gum. LOL. Applied by hand very easily. I mainly got it to lube the paint and keep it a bit shiny until I could apply a real LSP.



I like to just top off with wax now, much easier. And, I thought I was the only one sniffing the stuff.

:getdown
 
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