Mike Phillips
09-05-2009, 01:46 PM
After that... quit touching it and let the protection ingredients you have deposited on the surface completely set-up, harden and bond to the paint.
Each time you give the paint another wipe you disrupt the coating you have just applied and push the protection ingredients around and 'yes' even remove them which is the opposite of what you're trying to do.
Even if the finish doesn't look 100% even, if you can wait, then do wait and let the coating fully set-up.
" Mike Phillips "
I like this comment. In the past, I have sealed a car and after the wipe down, the finish looked kinda blurred. A watery
looking finish. The next day after curing, the finish was clear
and reflective. Have you ever noticed that before?
Yes.
Some product, after freshly wiping the excess off, if you wipe the paint carefully you'll see a film or haze that will die back down after a few seconds, this is because you're spreading them around before they've bonded.
It's hard not to want to keep wiping the surface after having removed the wax or paint sealant, but as a best practice, (in you can), stop touching it and let it finish drying, curing, bonding, cross-linking, etc.
It could be anything you're seeing that isn't just right will be just right after some time goes by, so remember one of the goals is to leave as much protection on the surface and that means don't do the things that remove the protection ingredients, i.e. touching the paint with anything.
:)
Each time you give the paint another wipe you disrupt the coating you have just applied and push the protection ingredients around and 'yes' even remove them which is the opposite of what you're trying to do.
Even if the finish doesn't look 100% even, if you can wait, then do wait and let the coating fully set-up.
" Mike Phillips "
I like this comment. In the past, I have sealed a car and after the wipe down, the finish looked kinda blurred. A watery
looking finish. The next day after curing, the finish was clear
and reflective. Have you ever noticed that before?
Yes.
Some product, after freshly wiping the excess off, if you wipe the paint carefully you'll see a film or haze that will die back down after a few seconds, this is because you're spreading them around before they've bonded.
It's hard not to want to keep wiping the surface after having removed the wax or paint sealant, but as a best practice, (in you can), stop touching it and let it finish drying, curing, bonding, cross-linking, etc.
It could be anything you're seeing that isn't just right will be just right after some time goes by, so remember one of the goals is to leave as much protection on the surface and that means don't do the things that remove the protection ingredients, i.e. touching the paint with anything.
:)