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indianam3
06-18-2011, 09:42 PM
I purchased a new 911 and took delivery about 90 days ago. I plan to concours the car, I am getting ready to give it a good going over for the first time. With my last car, I experimented alot. I found the following to work really well:

1) Meguiars wash
2) Sonus fine clay
3) Wolfgang DG Paint sealant
4) Meguiars NXT 2.0 wax

This car for the first time has a 3M clear bra. My questions are as follows:

a) would you clay bar the 3M bra?
b) would you use the Wolfgang on it?

I searched the forums, some recommended just cleaning it, removing and marks with Alcohol, and using the Meguiars NXT 2.0 only on the clear bra portions.

Opinions?

zkeeper
06-18-2011, 09:50 PM
Have same thing...and I feed the material with what was given to me, a spray light foaming conditioner called Plexus. I use it several times, let sit and buff. Great conditioning and shine. Then, later when its time for "wax" etc, it clay it lightly, and then you can add sealants or a fine wax. I use the Griot's carnuba stick, on Titanium Silver BMW, and it simply glows. Slick and shiney. I would think it will matter little what you use for final app. If it is new, you may not need to clay unless it has been outside and acquired a good coating of roadie/city roughness. But I feed it 2x a year with that Plexus, [love this stuff] and then wax away, plus use Speed Shine which does a great job with the 3m Bra..good luck.:xyxthumbs:

jpegs13
06-18-2011, 10:19 PM
Don't clay the 3M. Wash as you would the rest of the car and use whatever your LSP of choice is on it.

sloox
06-18-2011, 10:30 PM
I was wondering the same thing. Also, does the 3M clear bra have any negative effects on your paint. Sorry, I'm a noob on here...LSP??

southbeach
06-18-2011, 11:58 PM
Do not clay the clear bra.....wash as normal and protect with Plexus....

sportscarhiatus
06-19-2011, 07:03 AM
Like others have said, just wash as normal. No need to clay. Contaminants don't stick to it like normal paint does. I found the Optimum Car Wax (OCW) works very well with it. Very slick.

FUNX650
06-19-2011, 07:20 AM
I purchased a new 911 and took delivery about 90 days ago. I plan to concours the car, I am getting ready to give it a good going over for the first time. With my last car, I experimented alot. I found the following to work really well:

1) Meguiars wash
2) Sonus fine clay
3) Wolfgang DG Paint sealant
4) Meguiars NXT 2.0 wax

This car for the first time has a 3M clear bra. My questions are as follows:

a) would you clay bar the 3M bra?
b) would you use the Wolfgang on it?

I searched the forums, some recommended just cleaning it, removing and marks with Alcohol, and using the Meguiars NXT 2.0 only on the clear bra portions.

Opinions?

What generation is this 3M clear bra? Who was the installer? Did the new bra come with care instructions? Being a new PPF bra, there is the warranty issue to consider. And NO!--do not clay, do not use abrasive cleaners/polishes/waxes (see above warranty concern)

I do have Plexus as one of my detail supplies. However, Plexus is not intended or designed for use on polyurethane PPF---the bra may look real nice and shiny now, but it will definitely yellow the PPF! Plexus was designed for use, and is excellent on, polycarbonates--headlights, taillights, helmet face shields.

3M has on their PPF web site care/maintenance FAQs. If you so desire:
FAQs (http://solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_US/Scotchgard_Paint_Protection/Film/Resources/FAQs/)

If one chooses not to follow their PPF manufacturer's recommended products, the only two companies that I'm aware of that provides guaranteed, and recommended by the PPF manufacturers, cleaning/protection products for all of the PPF manufacturers. And they are:

XPel Technologies Corp.: 210.678.3700; and,

Premier Protective Fims, Int.:510.623.1308
714.628.0100
You can visit their web sites for further info, if you would want to.


I have personally been using the XPel products for a long time now, with excellent results, but you won't go wrong with either of the above options.

PPF is, IMO, worth its cost and the difference between it and a re-spray--- the unnecessary costs for its replacement for use of not recommended products, especially while under warranty, should and can be avoided.

Bob

zkeeper
06-19-2011, 09:12 PM
Thanks for new perspective on the claying...will choose not to do that now. Thanks; tho it was done very lightly and only after it had been exposed to a LOT of air pollutants a year ago. It is delightfully clear, after 2 years, but of course gets decent gentle washes and conditioned.