Promoting your Website is Easy after you do this!
January 10th, 2009
If you want to experience exponential internet sales and jump to the top page of the search engines you really need to try this! I hit the first page of google with my UltraLuster Wash website. This is the real deal, with step by step video presentations that make it so easy to learn what the experts already know.
Ed Dale’s 30 Day Challenge will teach you tips and techniques that you have never seen before. I have learned so much about Wordpress Direct, Google analytics, Google Reader, Friend Feeder, Flock,Twitter, Facebook and so much more. If you did not recognize any of those platforms that I just mentioned you are missing out on your website optimization and your internet sales.
Gain abundant sales growth and learn how to promote your website with expertise! Check out the 30 Day Challenge Plus!
Start off the New Year Eco-Friendly!
January 5th, 2009
Help your customers start off the New Year with an Eco-Friendly Attitude!
UltraLuster Waterless Wash cleans, polishes and protects your vehicle while saving 100-200 gallons of water per use. 2009 is predicted to be all about saving money and saving our planet and since we do not use aerosol cans we’ve got that covered! UltraLuster Wash reduces chemical run-off that pollutes the ground water unlike traditional car washing. Our product is strategically priced to give our customers the best value in waterless vehicle cleaning.
UltraLuster waterless wash is excellent on automobiles, trucks, boats, motorcycles, ATV’s, RV’s, Airplanes, Golf Carts and any other form of transportation you can think of. Our product was just nominated in the Top Ten as Best New Product and Best Green Business by Fast Pitch Networking!
Get ready for the Eco-Friendly year 2009!
Have a Safe and Happy New Year!
She Scribes UltraLuster Wash Giveaway
November 30th, 2008
Thanks to She Scribes for promoting the UltraLuster Wash giveaway. Check out her blog and enter the contest!
Read the rest of this entry »
Motorcycle Detailing
November 22nd, 2008
If it normally takes 2 hours to detail your bike, you should try a waterless car wash product.
You can save alot of time and energy. Typically, using the traditional washing method, you drag out the bucket, soap and hose. You clean your bike and then have to pull out the air compressor to get it dry. Can’t have any water left on your bike or you get rust right? If you use the waterless wash you eliminate a couple of steps and alot of time.
1) Grab 2 microfibers rags. Spray on the waterless car wash product and wipe it off in one direction with a microfiber rag.
2) Grab the other microfiber rag and buff to a shine.
3) Done!!
You don’t have to worry about rust and you have just protected your bike from the elements.
The best part is the more you use the waterless car wash, the more you protect your finish!
Easy Way to Clean Your Boat
November 17th, 2008
My brother in law has a Hydrosport about 8 years old. His boat had severe oxidation on the Gel coat. It had that white chalky look.He hired a detailer to wax his boat with an buffer five months ago and it took the detailer 8 hours to finish the boat and $300 later. Two months went by and his boat started having the same chalky appearance. He tried this new product called Ultra Luster Waterless Car Wash which is a wash,wax and protective glaze.They also have a product called Metal Luster. He took the Metal Luster (total restoration and oxidation product safe on gel coat) and within one hour by hand he had waxed the boat and removed the chalky residue. He then used the UL waterless car wash to seal and protect it. It has lasted Three months now in and out of salt water and still looks awesome. If he would of used a buffer he would of finished it in less time but he told us it was very easy without it. Great results with minimal effort.
Save Water, Time and Money with Waterless Car Wash
November 16th, 2008
With the water restrictions and shortages in our country we all need to save water! The company UltraLuster Worldwide has the Industry Leading Waterless Technology. Their slogan is: Just Spray, Wipe and Buff and you have just cleaned,waxed and applied a UV protective glaze on your vehicle and saved 100-200 gallons of precious drinking water everytime you clean your vehicle.. Waterless Car Wash is great for automobiles,trucks,motorcyles,airplanes,RV’s etc.
Auto detailing was never so simple. You can even detail your vehicle in the garage! Who wanted to drag out the soap, water and hose anyway?
If you want to do your part and help save water ,use a Waterless Car Wash product the next time you need to clean your vehicle. It reduces chemical run-off in the ground water unlike traditional car washing.
Let’s do our part and help save our environment!
UltraLuster Waterless Wash does it part to Help the Environment.
October 15th, 2008
UltraLuster Waterless Car Wash does it part to Help the Environment. UltraLuster’s Pump bottle eliminates chlorofluorocarbons in the air.
I found this article on the net which explains the danger of Aerosol Cans. UltraLuster does it part by packaging their Waterless Car Wash Product in Pump Bottles.
No can do: On aerosols
Dear Umbra,
Love the column. Keep up the great stuff! A question: My co-workers and I are suspicious of buying spray cans, even though we know they no longer contain CFCs. We suspect that aerosol cans contain HCFCs — hydrochlorofluorocarbons — which are proving to be dangerous as well, this time as greenhouse gases. Do all aerosol cans contain HCFCs? Can we trust a “green” product like an essential-oils-and-water-based deodorizer that comes in an aerosol can? And what about non-aerosol cans — are their contents safe?
Kate
Boulder, Colo.
Dearest Kate,
Thank you for the compliments. In grateful return, I will tell you all I’ve learned about the aerosol can. An aerosol is a wee particle or liquid droplet that’s suspended in air, including natural forms seen in smoke, dust storms, or sea spray from the briny deep. Naturally occurring aerosols are of great interest to climate scientists, as (of course) are the propellants that shoot products out of aerosol cans. In former days, the go-to propellants were CFCs, or chlorofluorocarbons.

A can creates aerosols much the same way we might transform drool into a fine spray, if we weren’t so gosh-darned busy. If we simply open our mouths and let saliva fall out, we get a goopy liquid (thus, the bib industry). If, on the other hand, we apply pressure and narrow our lips, we can push the liquid out of a smaller hole, and it becomes an aerosol. Aerosol cans follow a similar principle, if a bit more explosively. A liquid product is poured into a can, the can is closed, and gas propellant is pumped in under high pressure. The gas, crowded and uncomfortable, presses hard on top of the liquid. When we press the nozzle, a tiny seal opens inside the bottle and the gas pushes the product out of a too-small hole, rendering it misty or foamy. Then we shave.
The propellants known as CFCs, widely embraced for being non-toxic and non-flammable, were hugely popular until the 1970s, when scientists realized that they broke down in the upper atmosphere and released chlorine. Chlorine, they found, is a “catalytic agent” in ozone destruction, allowing too much ultraviolet light to hit us. An international agreement to phase out CFCs was forged in 1987 and, as of this December, the U.S. ban on ozone-depleting CFCs will be complete.
Unfortunately, manufacturers have used CFC replacements that have problems of their own. HCFCs were substituted for CFCs in many instances, but, though less harmful, they also contain ozone-depleting chlorine. In this country, HCFCs are being phased out and will be completely banned by 2030. I should mention here that there are eye-glazing varieties of all these chemicals, which are used in many assorted ways (not just in aerosol cans) and were banned in different years. For example, according to the U.S. EPA (where no one, apparently, is regulating acronym use) the compound HCFC-141b has the highest ODP, or “ozone depleting potential” — the quantification of badness — of any HCFC, and the U.S. can no longer produce or import it. The EPA offers lists of “acceptable substitutes” that have little or no ODP, which presumably will allow the aerosol industry to continue its fine spraying into the future.
The ozone hole has very little to do with global warming but, as Kate mentions, some of the newer propellants are potent greenhouse gases that have high “global warming potential.” These gases, including hydrofluorocarbons, are far more heat-trapping than CO2, though less abundant. (As you know, greenhouse gases are not regulated in the U.S.) Additionally, the volatile organic compounds found in many propellants are now targets for fussy state governments concerned about clean air.
Unfortunately, I could find no perfect list of which propellant is used by which aerosol can vendor. But I think it’s safe to say that, although aerosol cans make a satisfying noise and well-fluffed shaving cream, it’s usually best if we don’t use them.
Even non-aerosol sprays, which spit lightly upon us via a pump and nozzle, may contain volatile or non-earth-friendly substances. Still, I don’t believe that any volatilizing ingredient in a simple spritz-y deodorizer bottle could compete with aerosol propellants on the environmental-destruction front. Famous last words? I hope not.
Propellantly,
Umbra
Easy and Inexpensive Headlight Restoration
September 7th, 2008
Foggy headlights can be very dangerous when night time driving. Many night time accidents happen when a drivers vision is impaired from improper lighting.
If you have foggy headlights there is an easy and inexpensive way to handle this problem. Many people have spent hundreds of dollars on mobile headlight restoration businesses only to have the same problem happen again a few months later. You could spend 10 minutes doing this yourself while saving hundreds of dollars.
I suggest Ultra Luster Metal Polish. It works on everything. It is a light oxidation remover, white in color, so it will not discolor the plastic while removing the haze on your headlights with minimal effort. Most headlights will become clear within one application. Just apply a small amount of UltraLuster Metal Polish on a cotton towel and rub into the lens. Remove excess polish and your done!
For heavily hazed lenses a light wet sanding with 1200 grid 3M wet sandpaper before applying the polish will achieve excellent results. If you have haze inside your lens, it is time to purchase new headlights. Minimal effort, low cost, clear headlights!
I recommend using UL Waterless Car Wash to protect your headlights after restoration. It will provide a UV protective coating for your headlights and they will stay clear for months.


