I've seen coloured wax for cars that you want to hide imperfections on. They seem to be mediocre waxes with a dye in them to help cover scratches, etc. can this type of setup be home made using something like RIT dye ?
I remember this stuff, although most colors seem to have disappeared. Wax purists will be scornful but that sounds like an interesting idea to me. Try it and take some pictures.
I was feeling particularly gullible years ago and tried this stuff on my '05 Sport Trac. I still have the bottle of blue wax in my garage, which I'm sure is ruined by now.
It's excellent at dying your rags and applicator pad. The scratch came back after 1 wash, so I compounded & polished it out by hand later.
I used Turtle Wax black on my black Rav4. It was a kit with colored wax and a black crayon. It looked great for a couple weeks. Then it looked the same as it did before the application.
Originally Posted by Propflux01
I've seen coloured wax for cars that you want to hide imperfections on. They seem to be mediocre waxes with a dye in them to help cover scratches, etc. can this type of setup be home made using something like RIT dye ?
If you mean the Turtle Wax version, it comes with a ChipStick which is a crayon like substance you rub into deep scratches and chips. That along with the solids in the wax help hide the appearance of the blemishes. Why do you think you could do better than the chemists they have creating their products?
Originally Posted by atikovi
Originally Posted by Propflux01
I've seen coloured wax for cars that you want to hide imperfections on. They seem to be mediocre waxes with a dye in them to help cover scratches, etc. can this type of setup be home made using something like RIT dye ?
If you mean the Turtle Wax version, it comes with a ChipStick which is a crayon like substance you rub into deep scratches and chips. That along with the solids in the wax help hide the appearance of the blemishes. Why do you think you could do better than the chemists they have creating their products?
OK I'll rephrase my answer. If you want to spend 100s of hours trying to mix up dyes, binders, base materials, etc., you might come up with something. But why, when you can just buy a bottle of the stuff off the shelf? Just read the post above yours.
Tried Sonax on a red car. Did nothing but make my applicator and towels red. You could use any matching crayola and get the same results.
Waste of money.
Originally Posted by atikovi
OK I'll rephrase my answer. If you want to spend 100s of hours trying to mix up dyes, binders, base materials, etc., you might come up with something. But why, when you can just buy a bottle of the stuff off the shelf? Just read the post above yours.
It was just an idea. Rit dye is a buck 50. Cheap wax I already have. Just wondered if anyone had tried it before. Sometimes experimentation works wonders.