Any good sudsing car wash is enough... do not get the one that is combined
with teflon, wax, etc... they are just garbage.
You also need a good washing mitt... lambswool mitt are great...
Lastly, get yourself a synthetic chamois-like towel... this will save you
tons of time to wipe down the car and laundry associated with terry cloth
towel. As for genuine chamois... It takes alot of care to keep the real
stuff good for long time... save yourself the hassle and get the synthetic
one.
Don't go overboard on what you pay for those stuff... warehouse clubs got
great deals on car wash... mitts... and sometime wax (Meguiar Gold Class).
You also need good wheel cleaner... Espree Magic Wheel (green) is excellent.
> Lastly, get yourself a synthetic chamois-like towel... this will save you
> tons of time to wipe down the car and laundry associated with terry cloth
> towel. As for genuine chamois... It takes alot of care to keep the real
> stuff good for long time... save yourself the hassle and get the synthetic
> one.
FWIW: As a kid, one of my summer jobs was with a car wash. I was tasked with
doing the inside windows, jumping inside to wipe the just-sprayed ammonia
from the glass... choke, choke... stationed at a humongous blower. It was
noisy as hell but did make it much easier for the "outside" drying crew (the
lucky bast*rds! :o)
Fast forward to a time when Paulie has a little more money in his pockets:
<g> Gleaning from that past experience, I've taken to using a back-pack
style leaf blower to remove excess water from the surface as well as the
nooks and crannies on my vehicles. It works like a charm, and a quick wipe
with a drying cloth/chamois leaves them spotless. Naturally, properly a
polished and waxed surface makes the task easier still. Neighbors thought I
was crazy (well, I may be, but that's not the point!), but several now use
the same method!
Cheers,
Paul
--- http://www.astro-nut.com ---
Tiger - 20 Mar 2005 01:59 GMT
Ahh... but if Paulie's leaf blower pick up sand... he literally sandblasted
his car... at 200MPH+... that's sandblasting.
Paul Hyndman - 20 Mar 2005 12:23 GMT
But... there is little worry of air-borne sand in most areas, even so, it
wouldn't get past the intake filter most (decent quality) blowers employ. If
the wash pad area (the driveway) is paved, there should not be a debris
problem, as the car... and thus the wash pad have just been soaked with
water... n'est pas?
I tend to keep my vehicles for a v-e-r-y long time (15 years on the most
recent one to leave the stable), have used a blower for twice that amount of
time and the only paint problems ever encountered were from road debris (New
England winters, and the towns throw *%$#! sand and gravel on the highways!)
Give it a try and you may just be impressed. Not too early in the morning
though, please... or your neighbors will definitely NOT be impressed! (Oops!
:o)
Cheers,
Paul
--- http://www.astro-nut.com ---
> Ahh... but if Paulie's leaf blower pick up sand... he literally
> sandblasted
> his car... at 200MPH+... that's sandblasting.