I think that Xzilon stuff is crap. Snake oil. Russell Westbrook Hyundai of Anaheim Charged us over $2000 for the "protection" on our Ioniq 5. I still question whether it was actually applied. There were no visible benefits (such as water beading, or shiny paint). The car was not prepped at all prior to 'application'. The finish needed to be clayed, badly. They say instead of just charging an additional dealer markup, they give you something for it.
Ah, that's right, it was 'Xzilon' that they tried to sell me in the finance room as well.
I had to come back a week after purchase to sign the contract all over again for the second time because these incompetent crooks said they lost the contract and I had to come in and sign it all over again.
So I was put inside the finance room not once but twice for the same car.
In that room they said they will 1) thoroughly wash and detail, 2) Machine polish, 3) apply Xzilon
ceramic coating both inside and outside and 4) bake it in using heat lamps.
And they promised that they will do this once a year for 7 years.
Their regular price was around $1500 and I was given the employee pricing of $750.
I thought even at $1500, it's a steal even if only a fraction of what they promised was true.
But I resisted, because when something is too good to be true, you know how it is.
Later I came home and did some research and it was nothing short of snake oil.
Some guy posted their experience online saying that he dropped off his car for a Xzilon coating and the car was out 30 minutes later.
That summed it all, pure trash!
This dealership I got my car from did not even have a detailing team.
They had this one guy washing car after car, old and new alike using the same dirty towel over and over again.
I filmed him from a distance when I was there the last time to receive a minor warranty service to replace a broken plastic clip.
I told the service manager not to wash my car under any circumstance.
Chances are this one carwash guy is also the one applying the Xzilon coating and all he could possibly manage in 30 min is to briefly spray water, dry using the same old dirty towel and apply some spray on wax and call it done.
What's the cost of doing that while incurring micro scratches for using the dirty towel, making the paint worse off than before?
Probably <$10 per visit, <$70 over 7 years.
No wonder why these crooks in the finance room will tell you all the lies in the world to get you to pay for this snake oil.
Even at the employee pricing it's well over 1000% profit margin!
And in return, you get thousands and thousands of micro scratches aka swirl marks on your paint.