Windshield sealants

Really? The water still scrams as day 1?
Yes. But note I say 10 to 12 months. Because there is some degregation that starts around month 10. And this is on a car that lives outside. My two garage queens that only get out a few times a month, I have yet to reapply...been 5 or 6 years now.

Also becareful where and who you buy your Aquapel from...there is a lot of counterfiet product online. I bought some that was relatively cheap and it only lasted 2 or 3 months. There are legit sellers on Amazon and eBay, but you have to review their history and feedback first, and I inspect them when I receive them...there are "tells" to the fake ones...there is help online about that.
 
Not every Amazon seller moves counterfeit products, but every counterfeit product is on Amazon. Buyer beware if you really want Amazon shipping.
 
Yes. But note I say 10 to 12 months. Because there is some degregation that starts around month 10. And this is on a car that lives outside. My two garage queens that only get out a few times a month, I have yet to reapply...been 5 or 6 years now.

Also becareful where and who you buy your Aquapel from...there is a lot of counterfiet product online. I bought some that was relatively cheap and it only lasted 2 or 3 months. There are legit sellers on Amazon and eBay, but you have to review their history and feedback first, and I inspect them when I receive them...there are "tells" to the fake ones...there is help online about that.
10 months? I am sold!
 
Yes. But note I say 10 to 12 months. Because there is some degregation that starts around month 10. And this is on a car that lives outside. My two garage queens that only get out a few times a month, I have yet to reapply...been 5 or 6 years now.

Also becareful where and who you buy your Aquapel from...there is a lot of counterfiet product online. I bought some that was relatively cheap and it only lasted 2 or 3 months. There are legit sellers on Amazon and eBay, but you have to review their history and feedback first, and I inspect them when I receive them...there are "tells" to the fake ones...there is help online about that.
I live just north of you in the rain shadow but still get enough rain that I have all three Rain-X products in the rotation . When they are gone I will look to buy Aquapel for the win.
 
I thought I'd follow up with my initial findings. Today, we had some light rain. The Aquapel handled that rain with no issues. I am encouraged.
 
I thought I'd follow up with my initial findings. Today, we had some light rain. The Aquapel handled that rain with no issues. I am encouraged.
Good news so far! Wait for a legitimate downpour. That's where these coatings earn their application IMO.
 
I tried a recommendation from here and applied NEW FINISH car polish. It works well, the wipers are quiet, and the rain beads off.
 
I asked TW if its ceramic product could be used on windshields. They finally replied "yes."
 
I don't know why you'd want to give up on RainX unless you're getting a foggy result. I've been using it for maybe thirty years and find it to do an excellent job of making water much much less of a problem for visibility, first by making large beads you can see though between wipes, second by making the wipers work much better. I never have fogging or streaking and I'm picky about having a clear windshield.

Another tip I discovered for "cleaning" glass is Bon Ami, shared on a now-defunct BMW E30 website in he early days of the internet. It was said by some that GM dealers used a proprietary glass polishing product that was actually re-labeled Bon Ami. These days I use it maybe once a year to polish the glass using enough water to get a good polishing action and a foam wheel on Harbor Freight's 12V rotary polisher. I'm sure bespoke glass polishing products work as well, maybe even better though I don't know how, at many multiples the cost. Of course it leaves a residue so I always do it before washing the car then follow with the RainX.

As long as I'm going on about this, the third thing I do is have a home gas-station style wash bucket and squeegee so I can always leave the house with clean glass and no smeared bug guts to have to look through.
 
I don't know why you'd want to give up on RainX unless you're getting a foggy result. I've been using it for maybe thirty years and find it to do an excellent job of making water much much less of a problem for visibility, first by making large beads you can see though between wipes, second by making the wipers work much better. I never have fogging or streaking and I'm picky about having a clear windshield.

Another tip I discovered for "cleaning" glass is Bon Ami, shared on a now-defunct BMW E30 website in he early days of the internet. It was said by some that GM dealers used a proprietary glass polishing product that was actually re-labeled Bon Ami. These days I use it maybe once a year to polish the glass using enough water to get a good polishing action and a foam wheel on Harbor Freight's 12V rotary polisher. I'm sure bespoke glass polishing products work as well, maybe even better though I don't know how, at many multiples the cost. Of course it leaves a residue so I always do it before washing the car then follow with the RainX.

As long as I'm going on about this, the third thing I do is have a home gas-station style wash bucket and squeegee so I can always leave the house with clean glass and no smeared bug guts to have to look through.
I've found that Rain-X smears after about 15 minutes of use.
 
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