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Awesome job! Considering you finished off with 26, which is a pure wax, this convinces me that 205 must have a lot of oils in it, theres just no other way to get that rich of a look without a pure polish
Negative. M205 is not a pure polish...does not get it's look the same way a pure polish does.
I would encourage you to take a pure polish (any polish) and apply it side by side to M205 on the same panel. The M205 technology is nothing like any other polish (including all other Meguiar's polishes.)
This stuff rocks! But I have a biased opinion, so I hope you check it out for yourself.
Or maybe we should call you "The Swirlminator" Half man, half machine!
The bigger the garage the more junk you keep. I went from a small one stall to a 2.5 stall and within a few months it felt small. Just leave stuff where it lays for a few details so you can figure out where you are using what. They organize it so what you need is where you need it. Heck, if you need any plans drawn up just let me know, I know a laid off architectural designer!
I'm definitely going to try it out! Since it doesn't give that super rich look from oils, does it do it by making the surface ultra smooth?
There are several different ways to create shine on paint. Yes, you are correct...the M205 approach is removing fine imperfections in the paint to create clarity. Though not a new objective, M205 represents a new formulation approach to reach that goal.
Fewer fine defects = depth of color, rich gloss, and clear reflections.
And let us not forget that it is a system approach. The foundational first step with M105 is important to get these results.
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