Washing Your Vette?
#41
Melting Slicks
Member Since: Apr 2002
Location: Tellico Plains Tennessee
Posts: 2,390
Received 586 Likes
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266 Posts
The first thing any car owner must decide is how much care and effort do you want to put into cleaning your car and how do you want your car to look when clean? If you're a "spray at the car wash and drive" kind of owner then enjoy the ride, my friend. That's why they built 'em. If you're one who doesn't mind swirls in the paint, hell... ya can't see them unless the light is right anyway, or don't want to take a lot of time then swish the damn thing off with Dawn and a bath towel and call it done. If you want to keep the new car look, sparkling in the sun, then you need to think about each step and component of your wash plan. I'm a fan of microfiber towels. Now, you need good quality towels. There's lots of fiber blends and even split fibers out there and some are crap. Buy from a retailer specializing in car care and detailing and get the good stuff. I went to a website specializing in car care and bought a pack of 10 yellow microfiber towels for washing, wiping, and general duty around my car. I bought a 3 pack of super plush blue towels for drying and hand buffing. Along the way I've wound up with more yellow ones I use for interior cleaning and a black one I use for dirty work like under the rear and inside the exhaust. I have some I bought at a big box store and they don't absorb very well. Bad towels, lesson learned. Sometimes I use one under my elbow when driving to protect the console lid from indentations.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
Last edited by Frodo; 10-20-2018 at 01:43 PM.
The following 3 users liked this post by Frodo:
#42
Drifting
The first thing any car owner must decide is how much care and effort do you want to put into cleaning your car and how do you want your car to look when clean? If you're a "spray at the car wash and drive" kind of owner then enjoy the ride, my friend. That's why they built 'em. If you're one who doesn't mind swirls in the paint, hell... ya can't see them unless the light is right anyway, or don't want to take a lot of time then swish the damn thing off with Dawn and a bath towel and call it done. If you want to keep the new car look, sparkling in the sun, then you need to think about each step and component of your wash plan. I'm a fan of microfiber towels. Now, you need good quality towels. There's lots of fiber blends and even split fibers out there and some are crap. Buy from a retailer specializing in car care and detailing and get the good stuff. I went to a website specializing in car care and bought a pack of 10 yellow microfiber towels for washing, wiping, and general duty around my car. I bought a 3 pack of super plush blue towels for drying and hand buffing. Along the way I've wound up with more yellow ones I use for interior cleaning and a black one I use for dirty work like under the rear and inside the exhaust. I have some I bought at a big box store and they don't absorb very well. Bad towels, lesson learned. Sometimes I use one under my elbow when driving to protect the console lid from indentations.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
Excellent advice.
May I ask what MF towels you finally decided were good quality--about to buy some for my new Corvette...
#44
Le Mans Master
Member Since: Nov 2015
Location: Lake Havasu City Arizona
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The first thing any car owner must decide is how much care and effort do you want to put into cleaning your car and how do you want your car to look when clean? If you're a "spray at the car wash and drive" kind of owner then enjoy the ride, my friend. That's why they built 'em. If you're one who doesn't mind swirls in the paint, hell... ya can't see them unless the light is right anyway, or don't want to take a lot of time then swish the damn thing off with Dawn and a bath towel and call it done. If you want to keep the new car look, sparkling in the sun, then you need to think about each step and component of your wash plan. I'm a fan of microfiber towels. Now, you need good quality towels. There's lots of fiber blends and even split fibers out there and some are crap. Buy from a retailer specializing in car care and detailing and get the good stuff. I went to a website specializing in car care and bought a pack of 10 yellow microfiber towels for washing, wiping, and general duty around my car. I bought a 3 pack of super plush blue towels for drying and hand buffing. Along the way I've wound up with more yellow ones I use for interior cleaning and a black one I use for dirty work like under the rear and inside the exhaust. I have some I bought at a big box store and they don't absorb very well. Bad towels, lesson learned. Sometimes I use one under my elbow when driving to protect the console lid from indentations.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
Ha. I do that with Microfiber wash mitts. I have 8 of them. Very good.
#45
Advanced
I use Chemical Guys Hybrid V7 High Gloss Car Wash Soap and rinse with a CR Spotless DI-120 Medium Output Standing System mineral-free, de-ionized water. No water spots.
#49
Melting Slicks
Member Since: Apr 2002
Location: Tellico Plains Tennessee
Posts: 2,390
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I didn't invent this method, its a combination of things I've picked up as I've tried to improve my methods. My expectation is as near a show quality finish as I can get without expensive paint correction and professional detailing. Cleanliness is a base to build on. Substitute 10 clean towels for a mitt, substitute one clean bucket of soap for 2 buckets and mid-wash rinsing of your wash mitt or towel. Overall wash time is pretty quick and there's very little chance of scratching your paint with unclean solutions and mitts/towels. Add in a few minutes to wash and dry your towels and you're done. Better if wifey will wash and dry the towels for you.
If you're really serious about cleaning and detailing, then try this test. With your car clean, must be clean, place you hand inside a Walmart bag or some other thin plastic bag and gently wipe your hand across the paint. Pressure isn't needed, just enough to feel the paint. Is it as smooth as clean glass or does it feel like there's little bits of dirt on the paint? Mine, just a couple of months from the factory, had the little specks that could be felt. I had to clay bar and polish. But that's another story.
I've shown my car, a '15 Shark Grey Stingray, twice in a local Corvettes Only shine and show with over 100 Vettes on display and won an Award of Excellence both times. One guy accused me of having as garage queen until I showed him 30K on the odometer.
The following users liked this post:
Slynky (10-22-2018)
#50
Melting Slicks
If you're really serious about cleaning and detailing, then try this test. With your car clean, must be clean, place you hand inside a Walmart bag or some other thin plastic bag and gently wipe your hand across the paint. Pressure isn't needed, just enough to feel the paint. Is it as smooth as clean glass or does it feel like there's little bits of dirt on the paint? Mine, just a couple of months from the factory, had the little specks that could be felt. I had to clay bar and polish. But that's another story.
The following 2 users liked this post by PatternDayTrader:
Steve_R (10-21-2018),
Walt White Coupe (10-24-2018)
#53
Burning Brakes
The first thing any car owner must decide is how much care and effort do you want to put into cleaning your car and how do you want your car to look when clean? If you're a "spray at the car wash and drive" kind of owner then enjoy the ride, my friend. That's why they built 'em. If you're one who doesn't mind swirls in the paint, hell... ya can't see them unless the light is right anyway, or don't want to take a lot of time then swish the damn thing off with Dawn and a bath towel and call it done. If you want to keep the new car look, sparkling in the sun, then you need to think about each step and component of your wash plan. I'm a fan of microfiber towels. Now, you need good quality towels. There's lots of fiber blends and even split fibers out there and some are crap. Buy from a retailer specializing in car care and detailing and get the good stuff. I went to a website specializing in car care and bought a pack of 10 yellow microfiber towels for washing, wiping, and general duty around my car. I bought a 3 pack of super plush blue towels for drying and hand buffing. Along the way I've wound up with more yellow ones I use for interior cleaning and a black one I use for dirty work like under the rear and inside the exhaust. I have some I bought at a big box store and they don't absorb very well. Bad towels, lesson learned. Sometimes I use one under my elbow when driving to protect the console lid from indentations.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
I only use one bucket because that's all that's needed for a first class wash job. No grit guard needed either, save your money for gas. For the price of a second bucket and a grit guard you can buy a 10 pack of quality towels and be far ahead in the car care game. I start by blasting the whole car with the water hose to free loose dirt. With my favorite car wash mixed in the bucket I take one clean yellow towel, dip it into the clean soap, and wash a panel or area of my choice, depending on how much dirt is on the car. I then toss that towel aside and rinse. You can use the other bucket for this since you don't need it for rinsing a mitt. Next I grab another clean towel and dip it into my clean soap and wash another panel and toss that towel aside and rinse. Grab another clean towel, dip it into the clean soap and wash another panel and toss the towel and rinse. Get the idea? Nothing but clean towels go into your soap bucket. Nothing but clean towels and clean soap goes onto your car. You can't mess up always using a clean towel. I use 5 or 6 towels most times. Mitts can trap small particles of grit and remain to scratch the next panel. Micro fiber towels can too, so that's why I toss them aside after one use. Never dip a used towel back into the soap, keep the soap solution clean. Rinsing turbulence might drift small particles of grit up through the guard and onto a mitt or towel you're trying to rinse. In fact, if you see cloudy water then that's a clue it's not clean. Why take that chance, small that it may be. This method, with products of your choice, will produce great results with little more effort than most methods described above and will help insure you're not doing unseen damage to your paint. I blow the rinse water away with a leaf blower and towel dry with the plush blue towels.
Cleaning the towels isn't hard. I wash mine in our washing machine, no softener or dryer sheets, with an extra rinse to make sure the soap is out. Dry in the dryer, again... no dryer sheets. Softener and dryer sheets inhibit water absorption. Look them over as you fold them to be sure something isn't stuck in the fibers. Not comfortable with a washing machine? Kindly ask your mate to wash them for you, explaining the need for clean wash cloths for your paint.
It all boils down to how much effort you're willing to give to the project and what results you're looking for. I want as close to show-like as I can get within my own abilities and resources. I sure don't want to hurt my paint by taking a short cut. Remember, if you see swirls in your paint.... then you're doing it to yourself. Or worse yet paying someone else to do it to you.
#54
#55
Burning Brakes
Member Since: Jun 2018
Location: Washington State
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You can also do this without the bag - if you rub your bare hand over the paint, and you can HEAR your hand moving - then its not clean. The sound is the same if you run you hand flat over a piece of paper - that same "brushing" type sound. After you wash, clay and wax your car, rub your bare hand over the paint - I guarantee you wont HEAR your hand make a sound...THAT is when your have a clean car...
I would never run my hand over my paint... That's just me. I only use the bag method to determine if the car needs claying. Otherwise, I don't touch my car at all.
#56
Race Director
#57
Burning Brakes
Member Since: Jun 2018
Location: Washington State
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However, because I learned how to properly care for my car's paint, I won't have to do another full on paint correction. So really, it saves time in the long run to just wash and care for it right in the first place.
Again, it all comes down to how much you care about how your car's paint looks. If you don't care that much, then yes, some of these extra steps will seem unnecessary to you. I won't wah my car unless I have the time to do it properly.
This was my paint after 2 years of proper washing on my last car... No swirls!
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Frodo (10-21-2018)
#58
Melting Slicks
Member Since: Apr 2002
Location: Tellico Plains Tennessee
Posts: 2,390
Received 586 Likes
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Hell, it took more time to write it out than to do it. What's complicated about a 10 pack of towels and a clean bucket of soap? The only down side is washing and drying the towels. I'll bet I don't spend any more time washing my car than most of you, and sounds like a lot less than some. If an owner prefers their own method then I say go with that. It's up to each owner to decide what he/she wants and is willing to put into it.
Yes, it does sound like Gary Dean but I think I learned about the multi towel and clean soap stuff from glen e. Anyway, I'm just passing along what I consider one good method among many for those who wish to go an extra step or two.
I'm headed out to wash my car.
Yes, it does sound like Gary Dean but I think I learned about the multi towel and clean soap stuff from glen e. Anyway, I'm just passing along what I consider one good method among many for those who wish to go an extra step or two.
I'm headed out to wash my car.
#59
Burning Brakes
Hell, it took more time to write it out than to do it. What's complicated about a 10 pack of towels and a clean bucket of soap? The only down side is washing and drying the towels. I'll bet I don't spend any more time washing my car than most of you, and sounds like a lot less than some. If an owner prefers their own method then I say go with that. It's up to each owner to decide what he/she wants and is willing to put into it.
Yes, it does sound like Gary Dean but I think I learned about the multi towel and clean soap stuff from glen e. Anyway, I'm just passing along what I consider one good method among many for those who wish to go an extra step or two.
I'm headed out to wash my car.
Yes, it does sound like Gary Dean but I think I learned about the multi towel and clean soap stuff from glen e. Anyway, I'm just passing along what I consider one good method among many for those who wish to go an extra step or two.
I'm headed out to wash my car.