Autoglym Ceramic Coating review

Autoglym Ceramic Coating review

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Chubbyross

Original Poster:

4,545 posts

85 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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I gave Autoglym’s new ceramic coating a go over the weekend and I thought I’d share my thoughts on the product. It’s marketed as a ceramic coating that can easily be applied by people at home, without the complications of more serious ceramic products, which might need to be applied by professionals with studios and heat lights.

I was working on a 2003 SL55 AMG which received a full decontamination and 2-stage paint correction. I decided to give the Autoglym ceramic coating a try rather than wax. Firstly, I wanted to protect the car over a decent time frame as I know the owner tends to frequent the more salubrious types of local car washes. Secondly, I wanted to give this new product a go as I’d been reading some good reviews on ease of application and favourable results.

Application is a doddle. The instructions are extremely clear and I had the car done within an hour. The coating comes in great packaging, with everything you need to complete the job (two bottles contains prep and the coating itself, applicator sponge, two microfibre towels and clear instructions). You’re provided with a bottle of panel preparation, which you use to wipe down each panel before the ceramic coating. I’m not sure if normal panel wipe would do the same job but I decided the give the AG stuff a go as it was recommended in the instructions.

After wiping down each panel with the prep liquid you then apply the ceramic coating using an excellent applicator, provided in this kit. I applied the coating a panel at a time using cross hatching. It goes on incredibly smoothly and is fairly easy to see where you’ve been with the applicator and where you might have missed bits. You then wait a few minutes before lightly buffing off any excess with one of the microfibres provided by AG.

The product cures after four hours and can be exposed to the full elements within 24 hours. The gloss levels are fantastic and the paintwork feels incredibly smooth to the touch. Luckily I had access to a garage but I guess this could be applied outside on a good day with decent weather and without pollen and other bits and pieces blowing around.

I recommend giving it a go to those people thinking of trying a ceramic coating for the first time. AG say the product gives 12 months protection from the British weather, although this could possibly be prolonged by using a decent ceramic top-up, like G2 or the new kid on the block by Garage Therapy (Two: Sigma).




ssray

1,101 posts

225 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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Thanks for the review

Pupbelly

1,413 posts

129 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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Not the best photo, or colour of car to show the results, but sounds good from what you say getmecoat

Chubbyross

Original Poster:

4,545 posts

85 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Pupbelly said:
Not the best photo, or colour of car to show the results, but sounds good from what you say getmecoat
I agree. The colour isn’t the best for showing the gloss. This photo maybe gives a better idea.


Pupbelly

1,413 posts

129 months

Saturday 25th July 2020
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Wow that’s more like it. Top work Sir!

Paulprior

864 posts

105 months

Saturday 25th July 2020
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I have tried a few of these finishes, the last being the Carbon collective oracle which is applied the same way, and yes when done it’s very smooth and shiny, but a week later the finish looks and feels no better than anything else, any thoughts anyone??

jasonTVR

29 posts

156 months

Tuesday 28th July 2020
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Paulprior said:
I have tried a few of these finishes, the last being the Carbon collective oracle which is applied the same way, and yes when done it’s very smooth and shiny, but a week later the finish looks and feels no better than anything else, any thoughts anyone??
The SL looks great.

I used Gyeon Cancoat a few years back and found that didn't work well for me, for this very reason. I have since used CQuartz UK and found that to exceed my expectations with two coats. I don't feel one coat would have been enough. I find layering is essential for durability and gloss. They will last longer if you maintain them correctly by using a car shampoo for ceramic coatings.

Roman Reigns

6 posts

72 months

Thursday 5th November 2020
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Chubbyross said:
I gave Autoglym’s new ceramic coating a go over the weekend and I thought I’d share my thoughts on the product. It’s marketed as a ceramic coating that can easily be applied by people at home, without the complications of more serious ceramic products, which might need to be applied by professionals with studios and heat lights.

I was working on a 2003 SL55 AMG which received a full decontamination and 2-stage paint correction. I decided to give the Autoglym ceramic coating a try rather than wax. Firstly, I wanted to protect the car over a decent time frame as I know the owner tends to frequent the more salubrious types of local car washes. Secondly, I wanted to give this new product a go as I’d been reading some good reviews on ease of application and favourable results.

Application is a doddle. The instructions are extremely clear and I had the car done within an hour. The coating comes in great packaging, with everything you need to complete the job (two bottles contains prep and the coating itself, applicator sponge, two microfibre towels and clear instructions). You’re provided with a bottle of panel preparation, which you use to wipe down each panel before the ceramic coating. I’m not sure if normal panel wipe would do the same job but I decided the give the AG stuff a go as it was recommended in the instructions.

After wiping down each panel with the prep liquid you then apply the ceramic coating using an excellent applicator, provided in this kit. I applied the coating a panel at a time using cross hatching. It goes on incredibly smoothly and is fairly easy to see where you’ve been with the applicator and where you might have missed bits. You then wait a few minutes before lightly buffing off any excess with one of the microfibres provided by AG.

The product cures after four hours and can be exposed to the full elements within 24 hours. The gloss levels are fantastic and the paintwork feels incredibly smooth to the touch. Luckily I had access to a garage but I guess this could be applied outside on a good day with decent weather and without pollen and other bits and pieces blowing around.

I recommend giving it a go to those people thinking of trying a ceramic coating for the first time. AG say the product gives 12 months protection from the British weather, although this could possibly be prolonged by using a decent ceramic top-up, like G2 or the new kid on the block by Garage Therapy (Two: Sigma).



Fantastic work!

Can wax the car after ceramic coating & do I need to use the Clay cleaner for a brand new car? Thank you

Tri-Star

20 posts

101 months

Tuesday 31st January 2023
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I value longevity more than a shiny surface that may soon disappear. How has/did it hold up?