Oh yes .......... another friggin' Vision thread.
I have to admit straight away I was never a fan of the 'Vision Boys', I didn't like the way they appeared to use the forum to get rich quick and their approach reminded me of the other great con - 'Magica One Go' so I made it my mission to basically take the pee out of them. Around the same time I started adding GG4 to my tank and later Ecover multi cleaner. GG4 in particular seemed to replicate the results everyone was getting with Vision (although I'd never tried it).
Then I started to get a white slime in my tank after several months so began to get a bit jittery about GG4.
Anyhow, I got my hands on some 'new improved Vision' and gave it a try.
As far as Jigsaws website goes I'd say they were fairly accurate with their claims. A small amount (2ml per 100ml of pure) definitely makes a difference to pure water. It makes it foam and gives a little slip on the glass. It
seems to give extra shine to both glass and plastic frames and
seems to give a whiter finish to upvc. Is it quicker? difficult one that ......... I'd say no it can't possibly be quicker, the water may look to cascade quicker down the glass (but you'd be hard pressed to measure it) the water appears to react better particularly to hydrophylic glass but I don't think it dissolves dirt any quicker (again hard to prove). The only way it would make you faster is if it boosts your rinsing confidence I think - you may rinse faster and clear off to the next pane believing it's better.
To be perfectly honest - I like it!
You don't
need it.
I think it's expensive.
I would like it a tad stronger (more like the original version I'm told).
But I think David Kemp and his buddies are on to something, probably won't change the world of waterfed poling but it's there to try if you want to - choice is yours.
Good stuff.
PS. I don't know what's in it - I managed to replicate the smell of it with a couple of products but still haven't a clue.
I might add I've been paid pooploads of money and free Vision for the next thirty years by David Kemp.