Cleaning Dust From A Classic Car
Discussion
A strange question.
I’ve a few classic cars that I wash and detail every few weeks / months. I drive them at the weekends if the roads are dry, and they usually stay very clean, etc.
I have them stored in my garage, so after a few weeks they can tend to get some very light dust. I don’t want to rub the dust off, but I also don’t want to put them through a full wet wash.
Any ideas on the best way to clean the light dust from them, without a full wet wash process?
I’ve a few classic cars that I wash and detail every few weeks / months. I drive them at the weekends if the roads are dry, and they usually stay very clean, etc.
I have them stored in my garage, so after a few weeks they can tend to get some very light dust. I don’t want to rub the dust off, but I also don’t want to put them through a full wet wash.
Any ideas on the best way to clean the light dust from them, without a full wet wash process?
Not a strange question at all.....know exactly what you mean!
Optimum no rinse wash seems quite popular for this kind of scenario. This and a few others in this video by Forensic Detailing.... ..
https://youtu.be/9WrZ9Zk4HeQ
Optimum no rinse wash seems quite popular for this kind of scenario. This and a few others in this video by Forensic Detailing.... ..
https://youtu.be/9WrZ9Zk4HeQ
Pet dryer. I use one to dry my classics and blow water out of nooks and crannies after a wash and air dust them when they've been sat in the garage.
Plenty on Amazon. £60-80.
Also useful on my modern stuff after i dry them off for blowing the water out of badges, wing mirrors, wheels etc so you dont get those streaks after a wash.
Plenty on Amazon. £60-80.
Also useful on my modern stuff after i dry them off for blowing the water out of badges, wing mirrors, wheels etc so you dont get those streaks after a wash.
Another fan of optimum no rinse (ONR) here. It’s fantastic stuff. I dilute it to the recommended dilution ratio, soak six or seven good microfibres in a clean buckets, then pre-soak each panel with the ONR from a spray bottle before gently wiping each panel down whilst folding the microfibre regularly so I don’t rewipe dirt back onto the paintwork. I then gently dry each panel as I go with a soft drying towel. It leaves a great finish and I can do each car in about 45 minutes.
The important part of this process is spraying each panel before wiping. I spray the paintwork and ten to leave it for a minute so I’m not wiping dry dust around.
The important part of this process is spraying each panel before wiping. I spray the paintwork and ten to leave it for a minute so I’m not wiping dry dust around.
I have a barn full of classics. Most are driven occasionally. They all have soft covers and only need washing a couple of times a year. The only reason for leaving them uncovered in a barn would be if I got some pleasure from cleaning which I don't. An annual thorough clean and wax is enough. Other than that a car might get a rinse off at a jet wash before driving home and going back under the cover provided it's dry.
I use a California Car Duster, it works really well.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/California-Car-Duster-CCD...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/California-Car-Duster-CCD...
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