RyanS
Ka-chow
Mine was just partial hood, partial fender, and bumper. And applied to wheel areas, door sills, and rear bumper using a sheet. 3M was much cheaper than xpel.
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Thank you. Now I'm looking for a neighbor that wants me to help PPF their car.Congratulations!
Is there any reason that you went with this particular brand other than more widely used ones?Gtechniq Halo. It's a flexible ceramic coating just for PPF. It requires two coats. I've done the first coat on hood, front fenders, mirrors, head and fog lights and front bumper. I think I'm using too much product and too much is ending up on the leveling/buffing clothes. My 30ml bottle has just enough for second coat on these pieces! It's beautiful!
Just saw it in use on Pan The Organizer YouTube channel. Said its flexible specifically for PPF. What more widely used ones are you referring to?Is there any reason that you went with this particular brand other than more widely used ones?
Talking to some local PPF shops, they use Cquartz UK brand (for flexible surface) or Adam's brand.Just saw it in use on Pan The Organizer YouTube channel. Said its flexible specifically for PPF. What more widely used ones are you referring to?
Halo requires two coats and lasts one to two years. At the end of its life they say to clean and decontaminate then reapply it. I wonder if the other brands require two coats and how long they last.Talking to some local PPF shops, they use Cquartz UK brand (for flexible surface) or Adam's brand.
Hard to say. The shops say it lasts for 5-6 years of daily driving. I would be surprised if it lasts that long.Halo requires two coats and lasts one to two years. At the end of its life they say to clean and decontaminate then reapply it. I wonder if the other brands require two coats and how long they last.