Sometimes when I waterless wash where two panels meet or on thin panels (like between the windows and roof) the waterless wash goes on the panel I am not cleaning.
(this is only a problem if I'm not planning on cleaning that panel later)
Any tips on how to apply waterless wash better? (or any...
I see.
Heres one more question: Do people put different microfibers in the same dirty towel bucket, or do people use multiple dirty towel buckets?
Because I use one (clean) dirty towel bucket and it seems to me like if the microfibers are together there... why not put them together in the wash?
Do people use separate waterless wash towels for lower body panels? (like, WW towels that they use for lowest part of vehicle & separate WW towels that they use for top part). Or is it not needed as long as changing towels a lot because washing and inspecting towels will make sure the dirt...
I haven't used this & I don't know how it is.
But I think Cerakote TrimCoat is for unpainted plastic? So if the hood scoop in the first post is painted TrimCoat might not be the right product. (maybe something else from Cerakote is?)
I tried some such products a very long time ago (not from 3D though) and did not have a great experience with them. The ones I tried either seemed too strong for my liking, or too hard to wipe off or get the right dwell time.
But that was a long time ago and maybe I wasn't doing things exactly...
When I soak it's a lot less than 10 minutes 😅 I will try 10 to 15 minutes next time!
The thing I forgot to mention is that there can be more than 1 spot like this, so 10-15 minutes a spot = a lot of time.
But I think the simplest solution here would be to use multiple towels & soak multiple...
First, sorry for the general title. I have two pictures in this post showing what I am talking about, and basically I am looking for opinions on how people would go about cleaning them off (mostly how to clean the second picture)
Here is the first picture:
Here are my thoughts on this...