Build9A
Well Known Member
I posted a question awhile back regarding the best products to clean and wax your airplane. One of the suggestions was to use Rejex if you hadn't already waxed your airplane.
Before leaving for Oshkosh, I washed and debugged my 9A and applied Rejex as per instructions. I had never waxed my plane before.
It went on wet with a clean cloth and then dried in about 15 minutes. You then wipe off the glaze without buffing or anything, just wipe it off. It leaves a real slick surface and is supposed to protect your airplane for 6 months or more. Bugs are not supposed to stick and can be wiped off easily.
After about 3 days after returning from Oshkosh, I decided I should wipe off the bugs before they became too difficult to get off. The Rejex promise came true, the bugs just wiped off with very little effort.
I can't prove it, because I didn't do any scientific before and after tests, but I really believe the airplane is faster with Rejex, but that is probably true for any airplane that is clean of bugs and waxed. (Rejex is not a wax, it is some kind of thin-film polymer coating)
I have no association with the product other than hearing about it on this forum. I would recommend it to anyone who's looking for a low maintenance product to protect your paint.
Fly safe
Before leaving for Oshkosh, I washed and debugged my 9A and applied Rejex as per instructions. I had never waxed my plane before.
It went on wet with a clean cloth and then dried in about 15 minutes. You then wipe off the glaze without buffing or anything, just wipe it off. It leaves a real slick surface and is supposed to protect your airplane for 6 months or more. Bugs are not supposed to stick and can be wiped off easily.
After about 3 days after returning from Oshkosh, I decided I should wipe off the bugs before they became too difficult to get off. The Rejex promise came true, the bugs just wiped off with very little effort.
I can't prove it, because I didn't do any scientific before and after tests, but I really believe the airplane is faster with Rejex, but that is probably true for any airplane that is clean of bugs and waxed. (Rejex is not a wax, it is some kind of thin-film polymer coating)
I have no association with the product other than hearing about it on this forum. I would recommend it to anyone who's looking for a low maintenance product to protect your paint.
Fly safe