Posts: 1,254
Location: Northern NJ
Posts: 8,583
My VIN: 10757 1st place Concourse 1998
It makes the surface of the paint "super smooth". That has the effect of making dirt harder to stick to it and water beads right off. It protects the paint. It is really amazing stuff for painted surfaces. It is of no real benefit for S/S. Just as you don't wax S/S to protect it like you would a painted surface. Ceramic coatings are like super wax, it lasts a LOT longer. The disadvantage is cost and before you put it on you should do what they call "paint correction". You fix all of the cosmetic defects, scratches, swirl marks, chips, etc because once you coat the paint with the ceramic coating you can't fix it anymore. For cars not stored in a garage it can last for months. For cars stored in a garage it can last for over a year or more. The coating itself only costs about $100. Detail shops that do this charge over $1,000 to $2,000 mainly for the paint correction. Putting the ceramic coating on for a small car like a Delorean only would take about 15 minutes. You just wipe it on with a small block and a small microfiber towel. To do the paint correction can take days. It is a great investment to put on a new car, it can add value to it by protecting the paint.
David Teitelbaum
Posts: 1,254
So are you saying that stainless is smoother then paint? I don?t know, but I would think it was not. If that stuff can make water/dirt run off it, why not stainless? How about fingerprints? Would it help with them?
Again, I?m not really sure it is a benefit for paint, but if it is, it seems like it would be more so for a rough surface like ?grained? stainless. In the video, it appeared to alter the color somewhat. I?m not sure if that is because it wasn?t dry yet.
Of course, I?ve never tried waxing my car. Does anybody do this? Pros, cons?
Here you go: https://gtechniq.com/product-categor...amic-coatings/
I have their ceramic coating on some of my cars. Will utilize it when my fascias get repainted.
~LXA~
Dunmurry | Stuttgart | Leipzig | Munich | Tochigi | Fremont | Bratislava | Sindelfingen | Kansas City | Oakville | Coventry
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 217
My VIN: 1983 canadian model
Another use for ceramic coating can be the wheels and the glass. I almost never drive when it rain but it happens sometimes, and the ceramic coat on glass act like rainx, as it is super hydrophobic and make the surface of wheels, caliper, glass and such easier to clean. It also cancel out static electricity, which means that dust might not get attracted as much to ceray treated surfaces.
~LXA~
Dunmurry | Stuttgart | Leipzig | Munich | Tochigi | Fremont | Bratislava | Sindelfingen | Kansas City | Oakville | Coventry
Posts: 303
I love the series. All of it. It got me excited and motivated again to take care of quite a few items that he's working on. This week I gutted my entire interior, replaced the dash, getting binnacle wrapped, detailing the carpets, installing sound dampening pads. Cleaning up all the stuff I've accumulated the past 24yrs.
Alex at LSC is great to watch. His excitement is contagious, and his videos are just all around fun.
Have not watched it all yet.. but its back a dmc with Mike
https://youtu.be/AeX-MWbB7-Q?si=OnxGMe7ajSGpsfvD