We didn't just want to get some Ultra-Ever Dry and tell you about it, though-we'd much rather show you.
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Two hundred dollars and one expense report later, I had a box full of Ultra-Ever Dry cans sitting on the floor of my office, ready to be applied to things various and sundry. We were just as amazed as most of you were, and we knew we had to try this stuff out. Ultra-Ever Dry claims to be a "revolutionary super hydrophobic coating that repels water and refined oils using nanotechnology." Clearly, either the company has made a pact with the devil and gained supernatural powers, or it's got some awesomely talented materials people. The video is an endless cycle of items shrugging off water, mud, oil, dirt, paint, and other stickiness with eye-popping ease. That sequence has played out nearly two million times through YouTube (it's literally more popular than some official Justin Bieber offerings). Then the title: "What is Ultra-Ever Dry?" Water beads up and shoots off the surface, leaving the plate bone-dry. A mysterious hand is getting ready to soak this thing with a squeeze bottle full of water, but the first squirt yields puzzling results. You've seen the video, right? An image of what looks like an azure-colored metal floor plate appears, backed by some "Streets Have No Name" guitar knock-off. The piece originally ran on it appears unchanged below. So for today's holiday, we're resurfacing this hands-on look at Ultra Ever Dry-ketchup and mustard included. Being the rigorous reviewers we are, Ars couldn't sit this one out.
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Back in 2013, a certain hydrophobic sealant called Ultra-Ever Dry swept through a niche portion of the Internet thanks to what seemed like a too-good-to-be-true demo video that went viral. Though now that we mention condiments, everyone's favorite hotdog toppings did once crossover into Ars daily life. It's Independence Day in the US, and much of our staff is at work near a grill with ketchup and mustard handy instead of office supplies.