Fazer Owners Club - Unofficial

General => General => Topic started by: Ian-man on 08 November 2013, 12:01:40 am

Title: water repellent for visors
Post by: Ian-man on 08 November 2013, 12:01:40 am
Does anyone have recommendations or suggestions for products to use on the outside of your visor to help make the water run off, without having to keep wiping.


Thanks in advance.  :)
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: mickvp on 08 November 2013, 12:03:14 am
see here:

http://foc-u.co.uk/index.php/topic,10608.msg111957.html#msg111957 (http://foc-u.co.uk/index.php/topic,10608.msg111957.html#msg111957)

Either Carpro Hydro2 or Gtechniq G5. both work great:)
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: chaz on 08 November 2013, 12:07:27 am
70 mph does the trick, turn your head to the left and right at slower speeds helps, used to have gloves with a squeegee on, lol. not tried anything else.
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Chris on 08 November 2013, 12:36:16 am
Gtechniq G5 all the way for me  8)
 
Plus turn your head to the side a bit and it all just shoots off  :)
 
Chris
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: rustyrider on 08 November 2013, 12:38:13 am
Rain-X.  Treated my visor years ago and the rain just ran off it.  Recently bought a new visor, didn't treat it and couldn't understand why I had to keep wiping it so I could see where I was going.  Right pain at night (not that I ever go out much in the rain at night, not on a box-eye anyway.....).
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Frosties on 08 November 2013, 10:36:50 am
I'm on the Nikwax as per linky - great stuff.


http://www.nikwax.com/en-gb/products/productdetail.php?productid=248 (http://www.nikwax.com/en-gb/products/productdetail.php?productid=248)


If i'm at work having cleaned the visor before setting off home then i just use some of the cleaners Barry!
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Ebme Geek on 08 November 2013, 10:50:56 am
Mr Sheen works for me, cheap and simple
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Grahamm on 08 November 2013, 01:00:46 pm
I use Nikwax too.

About the only thing it doesn't handle well is that very fine road spray flicked up by cars' wheels after it's stopped raining.

Question for those who use other products, are any of them good for dealing with this sort of spray?
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: JZS 600 on 08 November 2013, 01:10:08 pm
I got a vee wipe, it's very good,, well recommended
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: bigralphie on 08 November 2013, 02:50:55 pm
Horse semen
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Kosmic Kartman on 08 November 2013, 05:20:45 pm
Horse semen

 :rollin

I use sainsburys basic furniture polish.
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: paulkemp on 08 November 2013, 05:24:35 pm
Only ever used Mr Sheen .
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: mickvp on 08 November 2013, 05:34:39 pm
Question for those who use other products, are any of them good for dealing with this sort of spray?

yes. any products i have ever tried (about 10-15 different ones now - I used to review products on detailing world) have all suffered at the hands of this type of spray/mist.

I dont think thats a downfall of any of the products though, but more a failing in the physics behind how they work (by increasing the contact angle between the visor and the beads of water).

with very fine particles/beads these get trapped in the structure of the nanostructure and dont bead correctly.

If the coatings advance enough to achieve superhydrophobicity states (>150º) this should solve the problem, but coatings are generally not that advanced just yet (coatings that do this ARE available, but they dont retain enough optical clarity to be of any use for visors/paint coatings).
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: bri h on 08 November 2013, 06:39:26 pm
check out visorvisions web site
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: ChristoT on 08 November 2013, 08:51:06 pm
Horse semen

 :rollin

I use sainsburys basic furniture polish.

Isn't that the same thing? I mean, they use horse in the meat, why not anywhere else?  :lol :lol :lol
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Ian-man on 08 November 2013, 11:41:39 pm
Thanks peeps for the suggestions, I decided to skip the horse semen and have ordered some g5.

I forgot that I had tried polish and nickwax years ago, I must be going senile. Anyway thought I'd try the hi tech route this time.
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: Punkstig on 09 November 2013, 10:26:17 am
Rainex is a big nono for visors, it's made for glass not plastic and will destroy the visor with prolonged use!


I used a product bought from infinity (product name forgotten which doesn't help) which over several uses melted the scratch resistant coating from the visor rendering it useless, didn't realise it was the product that caused this until it happened a 2nd time on a different helmet and visor, visor got sent back and replaced foc!


Up until I'd realised what it had done the effect it created beading the rain off the visor was actually fantastic, but it only lasts an hour or so in constant rain!


After that I've been hesitant about using another product for fear of it destroying yet another £40 visor!
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: elbrownos on 10 November 2013, 11:30:56 am
Anybody know how to stop rain coming inside your visor?
My helmet's 2 years old and used to be fine but now in the rain I get drips coming down from the top.
There is a seal there and it seems ok but isn't doing its job.
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: stevierst on 10 November 2013, 12:38:19 pm
Some helmets can adjust the visor so it fits and seals properly, you'll have to take a look at the side pods and see if there's adjusting screws or something like that.
Title: Re: water repellent for visors
Post by: nakedadder on 10 November 2013, 03:28:57 pm
Tried many different products over the years (not including horse semen though  :lol ), and this (http://www.plexusplasticcleaner.com/plexus.html) is by far the best, not cheap but it does what it says on the tin  :)