| Yea.. Quixx is very effective.. Only suggestion I would make is get rid of those white synthetic buff cloths. Theyre horrible, and WILL scratch your paint if you press hard on them.. Instead, apply the products with a 100% terry towel cut to a manageable size.. The nap in the terry holds the product, and gives enough cutting action to make the product work.. Therefore its more effective than foam, for instance, at working the product.. Work it by hand with moderate pressure leaning on it for a couple of minutes, until the product begins to thin out noticeably.. Then, remove it with micro fiber cloth. Thats for the first step.. Use similar process for the finishing step, but dont need to lean as hard or work it as long. Ive had excellent results with it. I had a couple of scratches near my hood badge the other day which up til now all Ive been able to do is substantially round the edges off of. With Quixx, I was able to almost completely remove it. Previously, I thought i was going to have to sand it first, but Quixx did a terrific job on it.. Id say its most effective when used on singular scratches which youve been unable to get out with milder methods. For 'spot' duty like this, its very good.
__________________ Paul E
'99 White M3 71k mi; Dinan SC kit, 6"/3.48" sc pulleys, Aftercooler: 10.5 psi-367 SAE rwhp/304 rwftlbs @80 degrees ambient (still with OBDII manifold); DynoTuning by Nick G (techniquetuning.com); Speed Shop: Imported Cars of Stamford; AA-Aquamist Water Injection, exhaust; Fikse FM-10s; Koni Suspension; Stealthboxes http://photos.yahoo.com/boostm3  |