» Autogeek Car Care Products | | |  | | 
08-08-2007, 11:02 PM
| | Junior Member | | Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 28
| | Spit-Shining Wgat is spit shining.Can someone be kind enough to elaborate the process for the above.Thanks  | 
08-08-2007, 11:08 PM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: CA, bay area
Posts: 1,183
| | .............you dont mean.......like.........spitting on a surface and buffing it off....do you????????  | 
08-08-2007, 11:34 PM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Windsor, Ontario
Posts: 907
| | | I personally think it's a lot of hype. I tried the spit shine method and found it to be no better than a regular hand application. For my black car, my time is better spent putting on a coat of RMG or Menz glaze prior to the LSP. Just my $.02
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2004 Infiniti FX35
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08-09-2007, 12:35 AM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Chino Hills, CA
Posts: 1,516
| | | just spray water, a lot of the shoe shiners use a fine mist of water instead of spit nowadays
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06 Honda S2000 (SOLD!) 
08 BMW M5
05 Acura TSX (Wife's car)
02 BMW M3
00 NSX (SOLD)
05 NSX Imola Orange (Looking to buy)
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08-09-2007, 01:07 AM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: CA, bay area
Posts: 1,183
| | Im lost are we talking about something else...or about the spit shining like the old shoe polishers?   | 
08-09-2007, 04:44 AM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Mountville, PA
Posts: 1,526
| | Here is a copy and paste on the subject.
This was posted by Neothin.....a long-time member here. Quote:
spit shining 101-
1. have a layer of cured carnauba on the car (usually takes about 24 hours). When I say a carnauba has to cure, I'm talking about all the solvents that are in the wax have to evaporate leaving just the carnauba on the car.
2. take a spray bottle of pure water and put it into the freezer. Do not let it turn to ice. You want it to get as cold as possible without it turning into ice. When I spit shine, the top 1/2 inch or so of water in the bottle is ice.
3. now for the actual spit shining part. spray a small area of the paint with the cold water (somewhat generously). Then apply your carnauba over top of the cold water. make sure that the paint is cool to the touch before you start. apply until the droplets are gone. Let the nuba dry and then buff off with a MF.
Now for an explanation of what's actually happening here. If you have a layer of carnauba on the car, and then you apply another layer of carnauba on the car, the solvents in the second layer of carnauba will actually dissolve the first layer and the two layers will combine. The cold water spritz'd onto the surface keeps the first layer solid and doesn't let it dissolve. For example, collinite's 845 insulator wax is a good example. When the wax is warm, it's a thick liquid. When cool though, it becomes almost a paste because it hardens up. This is exaxtly what is happening on your paint. The cold water hardens up the first layer of wax to the point where the second layer's solvents cant dissolve it. Instead of having just one layer of wax on the car that is a combination of whatever you've applied, by spit shining the layers you apply, you have separate and defined layers of wax which helps the look overall (especially for showing the car off and you have 4, 5, 6, or more layers on the car).
| The thread is located here http://www.autogeekonline.net/forum/...ttys-blue.html
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Alban B-)
2008 Ford F250 XLT 6.4L PSD, 4X4, SC, SB, Bedrug bedliner, Torza Trifold Tonneau cover, SS step bars / Dark Shadow Gray Metallic
2006 Nissan Sentra 1.8S / Inferno
Last edited by alban61 : 08-09-2007 at 04:47 AM.
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08-09-2007, 02:43 PM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Southern NH
Posts: 1,644
| | I took spit shining to another level and instead of using cold water, I threw some OCW in the fridge and used that  . I then spray on some OCW and rub in some Natty's and get a very glossy finish. I have also sprayed a squirt or two of OCW on the paint before using a finishing pad on the PC with PB EX or a liquid wax ... same results  . I found it to add a lot of gloss to the finish...
Here is the Tacoma after OCW and either Natty's or S100 spit shined... can't remember...
Very glossy:
Yet a ton of metal flake still:  | 
08-09-2007, 03:04 PM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: CA, bay area
Posts: 1,183
| | Quote: |
Originally Posted by alban61 | This is super interesting. I read it all but I am confused. How does this water harden the wax and prevent it from being dissolved? Also, you mist the panel right, then you apply the wax on top pf the panel, how will the drops disappear? And how does this work with a wax like SSII where you are suppose to wipe on wipe off and not let it haze, do you let it haze? | 
08-10-2007, 12:22 AM
| | Senior Member | | Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 180
| | | I tried this before and didn't notice any difference. Possibly user error. Wonder if I could use a piece of glass and build it up to the point the you could scrape it off. Also if the cold hardens the wax so that it doesn't come off couldn't you just add layers upon layers on a cold winter day? | 
08-10-2007, 12:37 AM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Chino Hills, CA
Posts: 1,516
| | | Man I really missed the boat
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06 Honda S2000 (SOLD!) 
08 BMW M5
05 Acura TSX (Wife's car)
02 BMW M3
00 NSX (SOLD)
05 NSX Imola Orange (Looking to buy)
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