Tips on how to clean a black car.

Tips on how to clean a black car.

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Discussion

Ray Singh

Original Poster:

3,048 posts

230 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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I have purchased a black car. It looks great clean, but gets dirty very quickly.
I tried to clean it today and got fed up with water marks. Once dry, the car doesnt retian a glossy black colour.

Can anyone recommend any good cleaning products that will leave the car gloss black (cue pictures of paint)?

I live in an area of hard water, so assume that this is not good to clean the car with?

Thanks

Froomee

1,423 posts

169 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Purchase drying towels as they help no end especially in warm/sunny weather and dry your car in the shade (don't let it dry in the sun).

If you looking on detailing world and cleanyourcar you will did everything you need and various "how to's" smile

dave_s13

13,814 posts

269 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Both my cars are black.

I've given up trying to keep them shiney, a futile act.

mike9009

6,999 posts

243 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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I always liked AutoGlym Super Resin Polish when I had my black 156 Sportwagon.

Mike

Willy Nilly

12,511 posts

167 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Ray Singh said:
I have purchased a black car. It looks great clean, but gets dirty very quickly.
I tried to clean it today and got fed up with water marks. Once dry, the car doesnt retian a glossy black colour.

Can anyone recommend any good cleaning products that will leave the car gloss black (cue pictures of paint)?

I live in an area of hard water, so assume that this is not good to clean the car with?

Thanks
Keeping them clean is easy. Keeping them clean without making 3,000,000,000,000,000,000 little scratches is less easy. I have a black car and black motor bike.

Yadizzle1

688 posts

125 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Easiest way to keep your car clean:

Buy some AutoGlym bodywork shampoo (easy to buy at Halfords)
Buy a microfibre washing mitt (helps to lessen scratches when washing the car)
Buy some large microfibre drying towels (makes drying easy and fast)
Get Two buckets

Process-

Fill up one bucket half way just with water, the other one with the shampoo and water (2 capfulls to 1 bucket works best for me)
Rinse car with water from hose

Take mitt, dip it in the shampoo and work one panel at the time. Start with the roof and work you way down.

After washing one panel, dip it in the bucket with only water, squeeze it (you'll see the water get dirtier as you keep doing it) and then dip it in shampoo and move onto the next panel. Make sure you rinse the mitt after every panel (helps keep you rubbing dirt on the car)

Once you're done, rinse the car again using a hose pipe.

Now dry the car using micro fibre towels. And it should leave you with a good finish with no water spots.

If you wanted to, you could do a few more steps like a prerinse with snow foam and waxing and polishing. But for a quick wash this method works great for me and the AG Shampoo puts down a layer of wax keeping the car nice and glossy.



Edited by Yadizzle1 on Sunday 8th June 21:38


Any excuse for a picture wink

Edited by Yadizzle1 on Sunday 8th June 21:39

kambites

67,554 posts

221 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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As above, I think the key thing is not to let the water evaporate off the bodywork. Keep the car out of the sun and dry it as quickly as possible after rinsing.

Probably best if you don't try this if it's a steel car, but if you add a bit of salt to the water it'll remove the lime-scale problem.

Ray Singh

Original Poster:

3,048 posts

230 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
quotequote all
It seems that I commited the cardinal sin of letting the soap (Zymol car shampoo) go dry on the car prior to rinsing off.....
It has left whitish patches all over the car.

I found that some Zymol Paint restorer does the trick, but I dont fancy applying this to the whole car everytime I wash it.


johnny fotze

394 posts

125 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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A colour specific polish helps, other polishes (which may be superior in every other way) leave white residue in the scratches and chips in the clearcoat, making them way more noticeable.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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It's all about drying the car off. Don't wash it when there is no cloud cover either, enjoy the sun doing something else.

DUMBO100

1,878 posts

184 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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I have a black Honda and my brother owns a car detailing company. He can make it look perfect for 24 hours but after that the swirls and scratches show again. If you have slight OCD don't buy a black car

Yadizzle1

688 posts

125 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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DUMBO100 said:
I have a black Honda and my brother owns a car detailing company. He can make it look perfect for 24 hours but after that the swirls and scratches show again. If you have slight OCD don't buy a black car
Hondas seem to have impossibly soft paint so pick up swirls really really easily, I had a grey one and no matter what I did I couldn't keep swirls off it for more than a week.

Mr Tom

618 posts

141 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Also if anyone has a vauxhall, don't let the dealer wash it when they have it in for a service... It appears they use sandpaper of different grades to wash it.

Jezzerh

816 posts

122 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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I bought some of that Carplan Demon Shine that you throw on after a wash for my black CC. It looks the dogs danglies after washing now, god knows what they put in it!

sideways man

1,315 posts

137 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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I had a black car (sunbeam lotus) and a black/chrome bike (yamaha virago).

Sold them,couldn't be bothered keeping both clean smile

wasserboxer

152 posts

119 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Take it to the nearest generic Eastern European hand wash facility whenever it's looking a bit dirty.

zeduffman

4,055 posts

151 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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Don't wash it in direct bright sunlight. No matter how quickly you wash the shampoo off you will be left with water marks if the metal has been sat in direct sun for a while.

Use a large plush microfibre drying towel to dry car as quickly as possible after rinsing. This will ensure you aren't left with water marks and will minimise the swirls you get from dragging small bits of dirt around the paint.

If you still get some water marks, you can easily remove them with a squirt of quick detailer and a clean microfibre towel. The sooner you get to them, the easier they are to remove. Doing this leaves you with a slight gloss finish as well as QD is also a spray wax.

DUMBO100

1,878 posts

184 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
quotequote all
wasserboxer said:
Take it to the nearest generic Eastern European hand wash facility whenever it's looking a bit dirty.
I used to do that but I witnessed an operative drop a sponge on a gravelly car park surface and then put said sponge directly onto my cars paintwork. They are the marks that I'm still trying to remove

Spiritual_Beggar

4,833 posts

194 months

Sunday 8th June 2014
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After you've finished washing your car, give it a once over with a quick detail spray.

That will remove any water marks or shampoo residue no problem, and leaves the car with a nice shine.