I think you meant you tried #20 over the winter as #21, a Synthetic Sealant, was not available to the public until the Spring.
No, I have and have used NXT prior last winter , but topped with #16 since i didn't trust NXT's durability by itself and M21(the purple liquid) since March 2005 and I do not aquire my supplies through local public outlets.
Where are you obtaining this information regarding sacrificial barrier thickness of carnuabas versus polymers? Can you please cite your scientific sources of information. Thanks!
Sometimes we have to use common sense since common sense is not too common anymore and everyone these days especially politicians all rely on studies and more studies and the results are sometimes not black and white as we suspect, but rather it becomes grey, you can actually see with the naked eye that old school carnuaba waxes buildup on the paint case in point alot of people have already posted about #16 streaking or hard to remove after applying and not removing right away, the streaking is actually a buildup of wax in that particular area versus the areas that were applied with a thin coat, so carnuaba waxes do build up, a simple test is to apply a bead of wax on a glass panel and let it dry for several days and will see which product dries the hardest and the sheer strength required to sheer it off the glass panel. If you have read guru's report on wax durability, you will see Collinite's 476S rank in the top five with P21S being ahead, but then most of us in the detailing trade would disagree with that conclusion too based on our real world experiences.
Modern doctors have never accepted acupuncture or herbal medicine as a viable treatment simply because they cannot explain how it works after hundreds and thousands of studies, but people have been using it for thousands and thousands of years with great success.
No, I have and have used NXT prior last winter , but topped with #16 since i didn't trust NXT's durability by itself and M21(the purple liquid) since March 2005 and I do not aquire my supplies through local public outlets.
Where are you obtaining this information regarding sacrificial barrier thickness of carnuabas versus polymers? Can you please cite your scientific sources of information. Thanks!
Sometimes we have to use common sense since common sense is not too common anymore and everyone these days especially politicians all rely on studies and more studies and the results are sometimes not black and white as we suspect, but rather it becomes grey, you can actually see with the naked eye that old school carnuaba waxes buildup on the paint case in point alot of people have already posted about #16 streaking or hard to remove after applying and not removing right away, the streaking is actually a buildup of wax in that particular area versus the areas that were applied with a thin coat, so carnuaba waxes do build up, a simple test is to apply a bead of wax on a glass panel and let it dry for several days and will see which product dries the hardest and the sheer strength required to sheer it off the glass panel. If you have read guru's report on wax durability, you will see Collinite's 476S rank in the top five with P21S being ahead, but then most of us in the detailing trade would disagree with that conclusion too based on our real world experiences.
Modern doctors have never accepted acupuncture or herbal medicine as a viable treatment simply because they cannot explain how it works after hundreds and thousands of studies, but people have been using it for thousands and thousands of years with great success.
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