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Yeah, if I was charging $1K+ to hard wax a glider, I'd be telling you about
all the damage I've seen done by clueless owners... The maker of the hard wax bar also offers a soft paste for orbital polisher application. Use it on the controls if you fear your thumbs. Pulled this recently from a FAQ hosted by a well-known maker of paint protection products... "Some waxes do contain UV-protection agents, but the amount of protection that a microscopically thin layer of wax can provide is limited The primary goal of a wax is to protect the top layers of paint that contain UV-protection agents from the paint manufacture. If you wash and wax your car regularly, your paint will be protected and you should suffer no major UV damage over the normal course of the life of the car. Don't be fooled by some companies that lead you to believe that it is the UV protection in a wax that protects your car's finish from fading and failure, this is dishonest and simply not true. Taking care of the paint you presently have will go further to protect your finish than relying on protection supplied by a liquid you pour out of a bottle, or a wax you scoop out of a can. UV protection in a car wax formula is only an extra-dose of preventative maintenance, not the end-all, cure-all that some companies would lead you to believe. UV protection for paint is much different from UV blocking ingredients for human skin. The two formulas are nothing alike and work in drastically different ways. There is no correlation between the ratings applied to the different levels of sun blocking protection for products intended for use on human skin and the ingredients available for use in an automotive wax formula. Sad to say, much of what you see advertised about the protective qualities of most car care products on the market today is simply over-exaggerated hype used to separate you from your hard earned dollars." "Tony Verhulst" wrote in message . .. Hard wax has some abrassive content but it is primarily a wax, not a polish -- it fills in tiny holes in the surface, which polishers do not do. This is what Heinz at M&H told me. In addition, the heat generated by the process also softens the gelcoat which further helps to seal fine cracks. You need a powerful angle buffer to generate this kind of heat, as Ted clearly understands. Something that almost blows your circuit breaker will suffice :-) - the US$40 polishers at Sears will not. Heinz also repairs a few ships a year where a bit too much heat was generated - especially on the thin control surfaces. It's a process that needs to be learned and I'm still working on it - slowly Tony V. LS6-b "6N" |
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user wrote:
Yeah, if I was charging $1K+ to hard wax a glider, I'd be telling you about all the damage I've seen done by clueless owners. Maybe - but then he also showed me how to use the buffer. Tony |
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