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Leather boots
how often do you wax?
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i think meindl sportwax is made by grangers.

bbf - proper wax is the stuff you smear on. i always treat new boots with the proper stuff first (nikwax/granders/meindl wax in a tin/jar as tehy are all much of the same thing). applied with a wet cloth (so the wax goes on the boot and not into the cloth) with particular attention to all seams. hairdrier the wax into the seams. allow wax to dry for at least 48 hours and give a buff up. (i usually then apply shoe polish over the top, again applied with a wet cloth, in a circular motion until it buffs up)

 nikwax aqueous stuff gets applied after boot cleaning on areas that do not dry in about 20mins i.e. the water has soaked into the leather rather than just making the surface wet. these areas are usually the forefoot crease and anywhere else the boot bends a lot. applying all over where it doesn't  need it is a waste because it just rubs off again on the nearest pirece of grass.

a "proper" waxing is neeed when the wet bits get a bit too widespread i.e. large areas don't dry within about 20 mins.

too much "proper" wax just ends up killing your boots with kindness as it will make the leather soft eventually where you don't want it to be.

i always like clean looked after boots. i don't care what they look like e.g. once in its life this was nubuck/suede/pterosaur. after all, they are one of the most expensive things you'll buy and the only thing you buy you absolutely rely on. so look after them.

the only thing to look out for on meindl boots is where the lace eyelets/rings bend on the forefoot. meindl boots are designed so that these dig into my forefoot giving me bruises. shame as the borneos are fabulous boots. an expensive lesson learnt although i do have meindl boots (can't remermber which) where this doesn't happen.

should something fall apart and they get arsey about what particular product you've been usuing on them doesn't really bother me. i write the experience off to back luck and never purchase anything of their brand again.

Edited: 15/01/08 13:18
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should something fall apart and they get arsey about what particular product you've been using on them doesn't really bother me. i write the experience off to back luck and never purchase anything of their brand again.

That's exactly what I did Parky!

Meindl told me I should have used 'Grangers'. I got some from the little shop in Kirkby Stephen when on the C2C in 2004 but it was too late for my boots.

Failed Under Continuous Testing is the expression I think!

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-Grangers when they need a deep waterproof but I don't want them to go soft.
-Aqueous nikwax anytime a patch wets out (mainly applied to that patch only) - this is the main product I use.
-Nikwax (the round tin) once a year to soften the tops.
-Nikwax softening wax - whenever I want to destoy my boots by turning them to oily paper...
- SnoSeal - NEVER -don't do it!!!!

When waxing avoid (esp. with the nikwax products for some reason) getting too much near the rand. This seems to cause the rand to come free from the boot. More of a problem the cheaper the boot and/or the softer the leather.
Edited: 15/01/08 13:34
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cheers parky, very helpfull
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ive been doing some research if you google meindl sportwax you can get 80g jar for between £2.99and £4.oo its expensive im just wondering if its any better than the more established treatments  .i just want to get it right first time.nikwax have said dont use thre standard wax on goretex boots and whilst ive read all you threds with intrest im still a little blonde .i never woried about my old salomons they took what they were given and were glad of it.
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grangers or nikwax will do the job. they're all spirit based waxes.

meindl's sil cream is the mutts nuts but they don't seem to make it anymore. i prefer silicone traetments as they seem to last longer than wax. timberland used to do, perhaps they still do, a tin of liquid silicone treament which was excellent for giving new footwear a good dose.

sorry, i get a bit anal with boots.......

Edited: 15/01/08 19:00
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I used to use a wax-in-a-tin called Wetpruf years and years ago instead of Dubbin which was old-fashioned by then. Now I just apply Aqueous Wax each time I need to clean them and they have never leaked.
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Thanks for that it helped big time.I will master this site lol

I remember wetpruf it was a kiwi product when i was a cadet about 20yrs ago great stuff it kept mummys little soldier very dry . Do they still make it do you know?


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