I coated my wheels a year ago. Still shed water and clean easily. Bit time consuming but worth it to me. Can’t mention it since it’s not sold at AG but I’m sure some of the ones they carry will do the same job.
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I coated my wheels a year ago. Still shed water and clean easily. Bit time consuming but worth it to me. Can’t mention it since it’s not sold at AG but I’m sure some of the ones they carry will do the same job.
I've used Gtechniq C5 Wheel Armour and it has held up to the toughest and longest Canadian winter we had last year (Mid Nov to April)! Thought we'd get a break this year, snow on the ground this morning!
If it's just wax. Spray some APC on it after you have cleaned them and let it dwell and aggitate it lightly and rinse off directly. Don't let chemicals dry on and surface and you will be fine. If you have an acidic based wheel cleaner you can start with that and after a thoroughly rinse. You can apply an alkaline based wheel cleaner. With aggitations you make it more effective. And think that this would be takeing off the old wax.
If this don't work you probebly have a chemical etching which is needed to be polishing. Test with the least aggressive first as a polish and move up if necessary to a compound. If you are unlucky and the chemical etching has gone through the paint on the rims. The aluminum is porous and it's gone deep inside of it. So it's only to be repaint them to sort it out.
You can in between the cleaning heat it up and see if it's coming back. A hairdryer is usually enough and if you know what you are doing and are carefull a heat gun will also work. If you get it back you may need to be doing a couple of these cleaning. Just don't heat up and of the new chemicals you have put on.