motelE
07-13-2011, 02:13 PM
My neighbor is trying to get me to try this on my panels. Adams Vinyl, Rubber & Tire Dressing. The results are impressive. I've always used 303 & it's done fine for me. This Adams stuff seems pretty expensive. Just like to hear anyone else's review on this product. :|
c_mack9
07-13-2011, 02:41 PM
its amazing on tires. i keep wanting to try it on my panels too but im not sure what it would do.
motelE
07-14-2011, 04:16 PM
He used it on the panels. It looks great but he didn't buff it in enough so it looked wet all day. Almost looked runny. Yes it looks good on tires. Now I'll see how long it looks good. 303 seems to get dull pretty quick, but then again I don't reaply it as often as I could.
:|
galor_12
07-14-2011, 07:08 PM
so, where are the pics? ;-)
NV_05_AWD
07-14-2011, 08:23 PM
Somethin' tells me thats gonna attract a load of dust.... Pics would be nice though?
Wrenchmeister
07-14-2011, 09:36 PM
If there is no pics it is not happening...
c_mack9
07-14-2011, 09:38 PM
Somethin' tells me thats gonna attract a load of dust.... Pics would be nice though?
yeah and i wondered what it looked like after rain.
jimmied
07-15-2011, 01:17 AM
I think you are going to want to use adams SUPER vrt. They updated it to be water repellant. Gets great reviews on some detailing sites. Will be on my next supply order next month. Will update when I get a chance to use.
kharizma
12-24-2011, 02:10 PM
I use Super VRT and it's great. Just hand apply, no need to use a lot or buff it in. Looks brand new and haven't had a problem. Haven't reapplied for months and still looks new after several washes. I'll get pictures once after I wash it again.
psschmied
12-29-2011, 01:19 PM
Dressing is a topical coating designed to hide a surface - like shoe polish.
Once it hardens and dries out, a dressing will dull. Unless you remove it, adding more dressing on top of it will it will degrade the appearance of your panels. On tires it isn't a problem because the flexure of the sidewalls, abrasion, and UV degradation will remove most of it.
303 isn't a dressing, a coating, or a polish. It's designed to react with, and bond with the outer layer of the polymer without measurable buildup, to prevent UV exposure degradation. If applied properly on a sound surface, 303 won't ever make a clean surface look shinier. If it does, it's been misapplied.
Neither a dressing, nor 303, will repair a damage polymeric surface.