Nope. Sorry guys. I'll have to address these individually I guess. Although my desire to argue with you really isn't all that high since I have nothing to gain, and I don't think this group is very receptive to free advice.
Also please note, I did not call anyone an idiot
Yes "UV protective acrylic" does exist by utilizing NON-acrylic additives to give UV protection properties. There's always a "special product" for special uses, and it is often used as sign grade, however 9 times out of 10 I see printers ordering standard Chemcast sheets thinking it's protecting their prints when it's doing nothing of the sort. Second, you can add all the additives you want to acrylic, but nothing absorbs 100% of UV rays like polycarbonate. For these two reasons, my default answer for acrylic UV protection is "don't do it". But yes, if you do actually order the UV grade sheets you can get protection from it. But sheet for sheet, premium top dollar polycarb is cheaper than sign grade acrylic every day and offers better protection. Palram Palsun sheets have a 10 year warranty against yellowing, deformation, and offer 100% UV filtering. Acrylite's sign grade acrylic only blocks 41% of UV light at 400nm. If your argument is that those two success rates are equal, then I'll stick with selling my products against yours any day.
You're going to have to get a little more specific "my friend" on what you mean by "use auto clears over signs". Are these painted signs? Then yes, that is absolutely correct, because yes, paint is already designed to be extremely UV resistant. If you mean auto clears over prints, then I'd like to hear some specifics on that since auto clears will eat at most inks. Even waterbased clears are not compatible with many inks and cause lifting and bubbling. To get real, extended UV protection from paint you need to use a 2 component urethane, so if that's what you're using on inked signage and it doesn't eat your ink, then you have a winning combo. However, UV inks are generally considered a low adherence, chemical cure product in the coatings industry while solvent inks are high adherence, evaporative curing products. Either way, 2 stage urethanes are a catalyzing convertible coating which generally re-wet solvent inks or totally eat low adherance UV inks. I personally use 2 main products for spray coating CMYK prints whether solvent or UV ink - a water based product and a low solvent product. Since they offer the best UV protection available and are universally extremely ink friendly, I don't advertise that information online LOL. So can UV protective clear be done? Absolutely, yes, we do it all day. However again, I see lots of simple answers like "just clearcoat it" taken by printers meaning "go pick up a rattlecan of Krylon Clear and call it a pro grade sign with 25 years of UV Protection." Then after it melts their UV inks, THEN they're really confused!
I also saw a request for a matte 2 component urethane - by definition of paints, urethanes are only glossy. You can get a semi-gloss obviously, but not matte.
To my original point, I could debate chemical properties, clearcoats, and substrates all day because I make extensive effort learning everything I can about the solutions I sell my customers. This is such a widely produced product type with such widely successful production methods that my original statement still stands: the OP is in the wrong business.
Oh and just for good measure:
sO i GuEsS tHeRe Is OnE uNiNfOrMeD pOsT oN hEre
You people are way too testy. Sorry I hurt everyone's feelings and made you mad.