I've used the Soft99 Glaco Ultra glass coating, which is very similar in application to the Gyeon QuickView. I'm not too impressed with the performance of the Glaco and am looking for a better alternative. Thanks for the video.
@@usmanishak9756 I've applied it to a couple cars and I wanted more hydrophobic qualities. I used Apex Detail's BC-5 ceramic coating and it is much better and more of what I wanted in a glass sealant.
why not go all in and just apply v the Q2 View kit came with the cleanse and repel coating. was going to get the quick view but the true coating was 10$ more.
Quick view will give you like 40 to 50 applications. It's accidentally faster. What are the main pros. The concert that it won't last as long as Q2. This is fast and impossible to screw up really. Q2 or fly-by 30 are true glass ceramic with a glass ceramic install process
Thank you for your great presentation. I don’t have a garage is there a minimum temperature which it needs to be applied outdoors during winter months? Thanks again.
I'd recommend applying it above freezing temperatures. The product is a liquid and goes on wet at first then drys out really fast. If a buddy or neighbor has a garage you could pop in and apply this VERY Quickly. Do there glass too lol. It's seriously a really easy fast install
I have heard this but I have literally used it on my personal cars including my S4 for 7 years. I don't use a lot and I don't do it often. Never had a problem. I have heard of what you are referring too tho
Some ceramic is pretty complicated to use. Requires gloves and can high spot and make issues or literally not work at all If you don't apply it right. I find my self putting quickview on fast now on my own cars. Like I apply it and remove it right after with cure. Gives a hardcore layer of protection for such a fast install. It definitely lasts longer of you do the proper procedure but I like many are very busy. So I'd rather do it "wrong" bust fast. Hope that makes sense. Also you get a insane amount of applications. I'm still in my first bottle of this. Lost count how many applications. Over 15-20 I'd guess. Most glass ceramic is enough for 2 cars max. Those tend to be much stronger. But this is easier faster and more uses.
@@STATUSDETAIL ahh so more like the most foolproof. Got it. Sorry my comment was just a question, although when I re read it, kind of sounded like I was trolling.
The first product bonds to the glass very strongly. The act of putting it on and leaving it is actually the cure process. After that it's "on" Now if I remove the left over haze with polish or label prep that's no good. Removing the haze with ceramic Detailer just makes the clean up phase easier and actually kind of fortifies the base coat of that glass ceramic. It would be the same thing if you apply to ceramic coating to the paint and then you topped it with ceramic detailer or Gyeon cure
It would be really difficult to put on wipers. You will see what I mean when you see the applicator. You could technically even use water in a spray bottle to help on removal. Any quick detailer will help. Ceramic detailer from Gyeon. Carpro elixir or reload. Gyeon cure. Etc. I would put a quick detailer or ceramic spray on your wipers in my opinion
@@billmartin3839 thanks!!! Gt500, Chiron and gt4 video in progress. Should be faster edits. So many videos to edit lol 993 barn find will be a great video!!!
In my experience if you polish or compound the glass first to really clean the surface well then use panel prep to make the surface ready for quickview that it will help a lot. Applying something like cure or ceramic detailer to the wipers should help too. If the wipers are to grabby they want to grab and skip. Cure is hydrophobic and slippery. In general you can't use wipers in dry conditions. This strips everything off and makes that judder happen pretty quickly. I hardly use my wipers in rain. Usually I manually use them vs just leaving them on auto. I think a lot of people are misunderstanding quickview. It's designed to be quick. So you can put it in fast and go drive maybe even in a rain storm right away because you wanted a quick application if something that would help you see. But it's very important to prep all the surfaces and polishing the glass is important. The carpro ceramic glass kit on the store has a actually polish and polish block in it to polish the glass. That's a more complete kit and quickview is more express. I think people are going so express that they are skipping some steps on glass that really need that prep first. If It was a brand new car for example you could gyeon prep and go straight to quickview. Any other situation really needs a full polish. You can do that by hand with a rag tho. 👍
Thanks for the video, Evan! Are you selling those yellow towels you were using in your store? I am seeing you use them a lot and would like to grab a couple. Thanks!
Hi Evan. Just found your channel. I’m just getting into detailing and I have all 3 products but haven’t thought of using them together like that. I was going to clay bar then wipe with over with prep before coating with quick view. The ceramic detailer is a great tip to try. Great video. Thanks for sharing 👍
You can definitely clay your glass and follow with Gyeon prep then follow with quick view. You can technically. Clay. Then polish glass. Then prep then ceramic. That's the true correct order and process. But if your going for quick view it's likely most people are skipping steps. Hense QUICK view Flyby 30 for example includes prep. Glass Polish and ceramic. No clay because the glass polish is very aggressive . The ceramic Lasts longer but more involved install. That's why I find quick view so cool and a great gateway to ceramic!!
6 months on cars that are driven often and or parked outside. Like 10k miles plus per year. A very long time on anything driven less or weekend sports cars. Like a year plus It's so insanely easy to put on I do it during maintenance details on my personal cars usually. You can basically do it as fast as wiping quick detailer on lol.
@@STATUSDETAIL is cure the only option? It’s the one I don’t have… I have ceramic detailer, wet coat, glass cleaner and quick detailer. I guess none of those have the properties of a cure?
@@AliSatchu ceramic detailer will definitely help. Here is more concentrated and more slick. Next time you do a wash I'd throw some wetcoat on the windshield too. If your wipers are old and have not been cleaned it a long time That's definitely going to cause a problem. If they're brand new and super grabby and the glass is kind of grabby which is not untypical for glass ceramic then you have a slickness problem overall. That's why cure can help. If the wipers are old I recommend grabbing a microfiber and just repeatedly pinching your two fingers against the blade and clean up and down. Black stuff is going to come off about a million times if you keep doing it over and over. Once you feel like it's reasonably clean try and apply some ceramic detailer to the towel and then onto the blades and then do the windshield. Remember in general when it comes to ceramic on glass and wipers my opinion is to avoid using wipers as much as possible. So when it's raining only a little bit and you get six little drops on the windshield and you use the wipers that's not great.It's just going to promote the ceramic to get removed by the blades you want lubrication meaning a good amount of rain before the wipers go on. I use the wipers manually basically when it's raining unless it's completely crazy pouring then I'll just leave it on automatic. But if I'm on the highway for the most part they just self-clean and I don't have to worry about it.
@@STATUSDETAIL that’s very helpful. Maybe I’ll try ceramic detailer for now and do the wet coat on the windshield on my next wash. The issue is I have a Tesla (new top only 5 months old) so when on auto pilot it doesn’t let me turn off the wipers. I guess drive manually on rainy days haha. First world problems. Thanks this is helpful. I have to ceramic coat my car which is PPF’d in matte so I got the PPF evo… just don’t have the space in my garage so have to wait for a cloudy day to do it. Do you think cure will be useful in my workflow? I got restart wash from Gyeon to wash true car before ceramic coating it so it’s got a deeper clean before coating. All advice is much appreciated.
Lots of methods here. Kinda depends how bad it is. You can use a clay bar on glass. Some glass ceramic kits like FlyBy30 actually come with a polishing block with wool on it. And carpro glass polish. You can buy that carpro glass polish as a stand alone thing but I typically use carpro reflect or ultracut. Be sure to use panel prep after. Glass is very hard. So a blue hdo or microfiber cut pad and ultracut is a great system. Quick views applicator surface kind of acts as a all in one prep. Polish. Apply the product. It's pretty unique and very fast. You just get less longevity than say flyby 30 from carpro. But that's much longer install.
Anyone experience super runny quick view? Can't be sure if it was the temperature in the garage or what but it was so runny. Had to rethink my strategy.
@@STATUSDETAILlol just seen this now, after dealing with QV over the last couple years something was definately awry with that specific applicator. Was alot of product coning out. LoL 😅 2 years later.
Nope. That mostly happens with dirty wipers. Especially when you finish it off with Gyeon ceramic detailer you get a really slippery slick surface. Make sure to clean the blades and a little of ceramic detailer or cure on the blades so it's all slippery. Chattering happens when you get to much traction and some ceramic actually can be not slippery. This is not the case here.