My suggestion is to use what I sell, but then it would be, which is why I sell it.
Corroless CCI works how you would like to think dinitrol and waxoil work.
If it sounds too much like snake oil, that's because it is not cheap, and until I started recently within the UK it is not targeted at automotive uses, because they are too busy selling it in larger quantities to everyone else, rather than packaging it in shiny box's and using lots of big words to sell it.
(You lot, including me ask too many questions about a product, vs how much we buy, so economically it's debatable if I can establish a market for it..
I don't know if my business will succeed long term due to the "hard sell" of premium I.e not cheap coatings, but we shall see.
My site is www.facebook.com/buzzweld
The main thing is your prep. Put more effort in to that and even cheap coats will stand a chance of lasting.
Not trying to break with tradition, but if you flap disc back your chassis, and are using out product, there is no harm in water spraying your chassis and leaving it a few days to lightly corrode all over. This acts as a fantastic key to the product, and allows it to work with the corrossion that you induced.
As I said, corroless sounds too easily like snake oil, because it does not confirm to our typically way of thinking about vehicle prep and repair.
Corroless CCI works how you would like to think dinitrol and waxoil work.
If it sounds too much like snake oil, that's because it is not cheap, and until I started recently within the UK it is not targeted at automotive uses, because they are too busy selling it in larger quantities to everyone else, rather than packaging it in shiny box's and using lots of big words to sell it.
(You lot, including me ask too many questions about a product, vs how much we buy, so economically it's debatable if I can establish a market for it..
I don't know if my business will succeed long term due to the "hard sell" of premium I.e not cheap coatings, but we shall see.
My site is www.facebook.com/buzzweld
The main thing is your prep. Put more effort in to that and even cheap coats will stand a chance of lasting.
Not trying to break with tradition, but if you flap disc back your chassis, and are using out product, there is no harm in water spraying your chassis and leaving it a few days to lightly corrode all over. This acts as a fantastic key to the product, and allows it to work with the corrossion that you induced.
As I said, corroless sounds too easily like snake oil, because it does not confirm to our typically way of thinking about vehicle prep and repair.
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