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Buyer Beware: The Dealership Protection Plan

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“Is there any industry standard of what is and is not a coating?!” I asked this question to a key representative of detailing industry.  His response was candidly, “no”.

Waxes, sealants, and coatings are the 3 primary categories of paint protection that enthusiasts and professionals use.  (Carnauba) wax is a natural product, from the earth, with a very short protection life cycle.  The other two categories of products are more of a complex synthetic (chemist creation) formulation.  When it comes to what is a sealant and what is a coating, the lines are blurred considerably and often unethically.  There are no true set guidelines of what defines one or the other.  Unfortunately, that is only the tip of the iceberg of the problem, as the attributes of a ‘coating’ have often been greatly exaggerated at times dishonestly portrayed.

How Is A (TRUE) Coating Different Yet Similar To A Sealant?

I will provide a generic and intuitive (from my perspective) basic distinction between the two (sealant vs. coating).  A true coating is going to offer a significantly thicker layer of protection on your car than a sealant or wax.  But this thicker layer of protection is still microscopic.  It will last significantly longer than a sealant or wax, but will degrade over time like any other form of protection.  This degradation is accelerated with car care neglect.  Although a good quality sealant offers some chemical resistance, this is another category where coatings really stand out.  True ceramic coatings offer relatively superior level of chemical resistance.  They create a RELATIVELY harder barrier, which contributes to your painted surface being easier to clean.  That does not mean your car does not need to be regularly washed properly!  Your car will water spot if you neglect your car; i.e. leaving those cool beads on your car too long.  If you do the SAME things on your coated car that you have done before to get swirls, scratches, and water-spots than you will continue to accumulate the same defects on your paint.  A ceramic coating rewards honest effort and affords us time to be human.  Also a easier to clean car, due to debris NOT STICKING, is the real meaning behind the term (commonly thrown around) ‘scratch resistance’.

This Is Often Not How A Dealership Protection Plan Is Sold To A Consumer

I very recently took a phone call from a nice lady who recently purchased a new car from a dealership.  She informed me about an issue with the dealership protection package that she received as part of her extended warranty deal.  Only within a week of her purchase, the deceitful promises given to her by management had become more obvious to her.  “I have this coating and I was told it was supposed to resist rock chips, paint peeling, bird crap, scratches, scuffs, water spots, and dirt for 7 years.”  She further explained the reason for reaching out to me.  For the second time in a week owning this car there were new hard water spots that she could not get off the vehicle herself.  This was a $1,350 protection plan.  She told me the first time she went back to the dealership to have them removed, a staff member removed the water spots and reapplied the product (that is supposed to last 7 years), all in a few hours.  I told her frankly 90% of what you were told is not true.  I told her this as I was staring at her car that had swirls and deep scratches on every panel of her car.  For the record (like a majority of people), her definition (criteria) of a scratch is not the same as mine.  But I hope at this point you realize that this product is not going to prevent a ‘key scratch’ or rock chips, even if it was a coating.

From my experience; taking an educated guess from the clues left behind:  the car was run through the automatic car wash, dried.  Some very caustic acid was probably sprayed on the car to remove the water spots.  The product, that I will not mention by name, was then reapplied.  Even the company that sells this product, to their credit at least on their website, refers to it as a sealant.

“But I saw a video!  They set the car on fire and it cleaned right up!”  Magicians prefer not to sell their products to true car care professionals.

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