My Most Used Products
The following products are the ones I gravitate toward the most. While I do like to mix and match, these are products that I know give the best performance, make the task quicker and easier, excel at the “user experience” and deliver me the end result I’m looking for. A nice scent plays a role as well. Important to note that this is not everything I use per wash, just the ones I instinctively go for.
In no particular order, these are my staples ………………………………..
P&S Brake Buster – I’ve been in love with this product from the moment I tried it. Back then, I didn’t have much use for wheel cleaners, and I still don’t to some degree. However, Brake Buster has become a staple due to its versatility and affordability.
I like how this product gives you options, as in it can be used neat or diluted, sprayed or foamed. When used neat, it’s a very capable tyre cleaner that lathers up beautifully under agitation. When required, undiluted Brake Buster can do some heavy lifting, I’ve found it quite effective as a follow up to an iron remover on neglected wheels. When diluted via a foam cannon, you also have a great maintenance wheel cleaner, the foam helping to increase your working time. Backing this up, Brake Buster is exceptionally slick and contains corrosion inhibitors.
I know there is a perception that Brake Buster is only suitable for light maintenance cleaning, but most people who say that have only ever used it diluted, which in turn removes some of its capabilities. When required, I haven’t been left wanting more out of Brake Buster when used neat.
Brake Buster’s only major drawback is its tendency to kill spray heads, a byproduct of its alkalinity, even with chemical resistant spray heads.
https://www.detailstore.com.au/collections/wheel-cleaners/products/p-s-brake-buster-wheel-cleaner
Carpro Reset – I’ve said this multiple times, but I keep trying new soaps wondering if Reset can be beaten, and while some come close, no other maintenance soap can tick all of the boxes like Carpro Reset. It’s easy to pour, foams like a champ, offers exceptional slickness, cleans well, rinses freely and smells amazing. Reset is also highly concentrated, which negates its price premium.
It’s biggest claim to fame comes from it registering pH neutral, but offers the cleaning ability of an alkaline soap. For that reason, there is some suggestion that Reset will degrade wax, but that’s not something I have noticed. In my opinion, the worst thing about Reset is the name, many mistakenly assume that it’s a strip wash. “Refresh” or “Revive” would have been more fitting.
If I could only pick the one soap, Reset would be my choice.
https://www.waxit.com.au/products/carpro-reset?_pos=1&_sid=fc9b86108&_ss=r
Carpro Hydr02 Lite – I can’t remember where I learnt about this stuff, but what a discovery! Hydr02 put an end to using waxes or specific wheel sealants (Poorboys), a simple spray and rinse application was a revelation. Keep in mind this was before ceramic coatings became mainstream, and certainly before dedicated wheel coatings. So, for the average weekend warier, Hydr02 allows you to get something onto your wheels and calipers without having to do a full wheels-off detail.
Now, it's debatable as to how much “protection” is being provided here, especially next to a stout high-temp wheel coating. However, it does help make cleaning and drying your wheels much easier. I also use it as a topper on exhaust tips. While I don’t use Hydr02 on my own vehicles paint, for completely bare vehicles, using this product after a wash can drastically assist the drying process.
My initial use of Hydr02 was in concentrate form, which was diluted using demineralized water. However, I’ve found the pre-diluted Hydr02 Lite and its Gyeon Wet Coat cousin to be more stable and less likely to streak or spot. It is more expensive this way, but it's also more convenient as you don’t need to buy two different liquids. There is also a Hydr02 Foam, but its junk.
https://www.waxit.com.au/products/carpro-hydrolite-1l-4l?_pos=2&_sid=f94a9b5ec&_ss=r
https://www.waxit.com.au/products/c...lant-50-100-500ml?_pos=3&_sid=f94a9b5ec&_ss=r
Bilt Hamber Atom Mac – I really only discovered the need for a product like this after taking delivery of a car with gloss black wheels. You see, as the brake rotors dried, a thin film of rust would develop on the surface of the rotor. So, as soon as you next apply the brakes, that rust was turned into orange dust that would undo your wheel cleaning efforts. And on gloss black wheels, this exaggerated the situation.
At some point I discovered Obsessed Garage and a product he was using to help prevent this flash rust,
Hydes Serum Rustopper. But of course, it was off limits to Australia due to it being restricted to ground shipping. Actually, I ordered a bottle as an experiment and somehow this shipping restriction slipped through the cracks. Shortly after this, Detailing Shed started to carry Hydes, then Bilt Hamber Atom Mac became available. I chased a product like this for two years, then suddenly I had access to two options.
At its core, Atom Mac is a corrosion inhibitor with many applications. On cars, it helps prevent the flash rust from developing on rotors and won’t impede the safe operation of the brakes or affect the finish of the wheels. I apply this immediately after cleaning each wheel, then again after washing the rest of the vehicle and prior to using a leaf blower to dry. This double pronged application all but eliminates flash rust, nor do you need to do the old backwards and forwards antics to dry off the rotors.
Granted, a 500ml or 1-litre bottle of Atom Mac is very expensive. However, the dilution rate is high, so a bottle will last you for years. At the recommended 5% dilution, you are adding 25ml into 475ml of demineralized water.
https://detailingshed.com.au/produc...1&_sid=8b09de597&_ss=r&variant=43369685090519
Armour Detail Supply Amplify – I’m at the point now where I can tell if a product is good or not within the first 30-seconds of use. Well, I think Amplify was closer to 15-seconds! This has to be one of the easiest and best ceramic toppers/detail sprays on the market.
The first thing that gets you is the amazing scent. Yes I know, a scent doesn’t necessarily have a bearing on how a product works, but it contributes to the overall user experience. There are products on the market that are quite good at their intended role but are totally ruined by the scent or odour that I refuse to use them. That doesn’t apply to Amplify.
In use, Amplify is just so dam easy to apply. In my case, I use it as a drying aid after removing the bulk of the water with a blower. A few sprays into the towel, maybe one or two onto a section, wipe, flip, wipe, done! It’s this simplicity that wins me over as it significantly reduces towel work. And backing it all up is supreme gloss and slickness. There is literally nothing to hate with Amplify. In addition to drying aid, I also use it on door jambs, engine bays, exhaust tips and wheels.
https://detailingshed.com.au/produc...1&_sid=3bc96ec9d&_ss=r&variant=44857484050647
Armour Detail Supply Pilot – This has been another instant hit for me! While technically called an interior “detailer”, I’ve found Pilot to have plenty of cleaning ability beyond mild wipe overs or dusting. In most cases, I use this product in a spray and wipe manner, however it can be teamed with a brush and lathered up if needed. I use it on just about every interior surface including plastics, gloss trim, leather, fabric and screens. Pilot also has UV inhibitors and anti-static properties, and the final finish is completely matte, OEM look. And the spiced pear scent is to die for, I would use it for the scent alone!
Overall, I’ve found Pilot to be a very well-balanced product, easily one of ADS’s best! You can tell it’s a serious contender when I move a product into a good Kwazar or Pressol sprayer.
https://detailingshed.com.au/produc...interior-detailer?_pos=1&_sid=88d56ccfb&_ss=r
Stoner Invisible Glass –For me, glass cleaning is a necessary evil, it’s a job that needs to be done rather than something I look forward to or enjoy. For that reason, I want a product and towel that makes it as painless as possible.
After trying so many glass cleaners over the years, from cheap to expensive, the conclusion I’ve come to is to keep it simple, stupid! There is a definite correlation between heavily scented and coloured glass cleaners and a streaky, hazy finish. Invisible Glass on the other hand is as basic as it comes, a cheap bottle and sprayer, no fancy scent, no lurid colouring. It’s just a glass cleaner, nothing more, nothing less. The fact it it’s cheap and can be bought from any auto store are added bonuses.
https://detailingshed.com.au/produc...ass-cleaner-946ml?_pos=1&_sid=73620604a&_ss=r
https://www.supercheapauto.com.au/p/invisible-glass-invisible-glass-glass-cleaner---946ml/365486.html#q=invisible glass&lang=en_AU&vid=m5mKgF5KVF+4W3zlSKwYBQ==&start=2
Optimum No Rinse – I was late to rinse-less washing, and ONR was my first attempt at the method. Ironically, I use ONR for jobs other than rinse-less washing. In my opinion, even if you don’t like rinse-less washing, having a product like ONR in your arsenal is essential. Why? Because it's so versatile; rinse-less washing, water-less washing, clay lubricant, glass cleaner, interior cleaner, quick detailer, water softener, household cleaning………………………..
For me, I always have a bottle of ONR mixed up at the quick detailer rate. This then gets used for wiping benches, dealing with bird bombs, cleaning tools, engine bay wipe downs. I also love it as an ultra-gentle interior cleaner, from plastics to gloss surfaces, leather to screens, even rubber floor mats. And as a rinse-less, I like ONR for its lubricated feel, and in the latest generation, its easy drying properties.
A staple everyone should have!
https://detailingshed.com.au/produc...-3-8l-new-formula?_pos=1&_sid=a2a17de68&_ss=r
Carpro ECH20 – This product is here for similar reasons to the above ONR, as in cost effective usability. Originally designed as a water-less wash concentrate, many also like ECH20 for rinse-less washing and as a drying aid, however I don’t love it in either role.
I’m primarily using ECH20 at the water-less wash rate to wipe down door jambs, engine bays and the tray of my Ranger. In a technical sense, using ECH20 for this helps clean and dry these areas that don’t actively get “washed” with the rest of the vehicle. In that regard, the mild cleaning ability and high lubrication make it perfect for this role. ECH20 also leaves behind some mild protection and works so nicely on unpainted black plastics.
When used on paint, it adds high levels of gloss and slickness that is hard to beat. And to cap it all off, ECH20 smells amazing and is surprisingly cost effective. In some instances, ECH20 can be a little streaky, which is undoubtably due to the carnauba wax content. However, being a concentrate means you can play around with the dilution until you find the sweet spot. For water-less washing, I’m using it at 15:1, for quick detailer/drying aid duties I would move that to 25:1.
https://www.waxit.com.au/products/carpro-ech20-concentrate?_pos=1&_psq=ech20&_ss=e&_v=1.0
