Dodo Juice Orange Crush Soft Wax (For Warm Colours)
The soft wax created for warm coloured cars. If you’ve got a yellow, orange or red car and like to sniff juicy round oranges, we have a soft carnauba car wax made just for you. Orange Crush. Contains yellow beeswax and orange oil.
A sorbet-like soft wax made with pure natural orange oil, yellow beeswax and lashings and lashings of T1 carnauba. When people talk of carnauba waxes giving paint a 'glow', this is probably what they meant...
Orange oil suits a car wax perfectly, being a natural cleanser and one of the nicest smelling oils on the planet. Blended with carnauba and yellow beeswax, it helps to create Orange Crush, a soft wax that breathes even more warmth into yellow, orange and red coloured cars.
Don't just expect a great finish, with minor swirls filled and paint so juicily glazed that rain bounces off it like glass beads... you can also expect a 2-4% dye tint on paintwork. It won't be that noticeable unless you 50/50 a white panel, but you'll know it's there and (to our minds at least) it does add warmth.
Recoating interval? About every 2-3 months, but that's on a daily driver. On a garaged classic car used occasionally we'd probably re-wax once a year.
Compatibility: Any Dodo Juice wax can be used on any coloured paintwork but some are 'colour charged' to enhance particular colours. This particular wax is best suited to warm coloured cars (such as yellow/orange/red) and it smells of sweet oranges.
Coverage: Each jar contains 30ml of wax, enough to put a layer or four on an average sized car (with careful application). Some customers have reported nine or more coats of wax from a single pot, so a little does go a very long way. Usage instructions included.
Hard vs Soft Wax - which is the one for you? Whilst many of our waxes have a standard consistency, we make some of our waxes a little firmer or softer than normal. Softer waxes are easier to spread by palm or fingertips. Hard waxes often cure faster and go further, because they are less likely to be accidentally over-applied. Both contain similar amounts of carnauba and beeswax and performance will be similar. Harder waxes may cure better if you are new to waxing, so these may seem to offer more performance. And soft waxes may feel glossier due to their 'sorbet' like texture. It often comes down to personal preference - there's no right or wrong with wax texture, it just comes down to what you like.