@Muhammed Patel As salaamu alaykum
@kesiro your mention of Hainan Arabi made me revisit my sample. Based on the note profile, I had been under the impression that it is a co-distill of Chinese and Hindi wood but after reading Adam's blurb I see it's Chinese wood done the Arabic way. Been a while since last wearing, the opening seems more like a Kalakassi lemony balm mixed with bitter orange, I’m not to the dry down yet but I remember it being a shape shifter.
I agree your assessment of Hainan Arabi and Hainan 2005 as well. Phil, you’re a car guy so you’ll get this immediately. Take two cars and paint them the same color, say Alpine Weiss. Same primer, same top, same clear, same sprayer. One car gets two coats each of primer, top and clear. The second car gets 4 primer, then sand. 5-6 top, then sand. 3-4 clear, then sand, clay, compound polish, wax and seal. Each car has the exact same color, first car looks good no doubt. Second car, that m@!?@#r will look WET!!! That’s why it is possible for oils to have similar notes verging on same, but be completely different in quality. Hainan Arabi is a high quality oil and from a note perspective I actually prefer it to Hainan 2005. But make no mistakes, as far as depth, richness and roundness, Hainan 2005 is WET!!!