Using inappropriate products to repair or clean the car.

Using inappropriate products to repair or clean the car.

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So

Original Poster:

26,277 posts

222 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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I've been feeling poorly recently, but felt that I needed some exercise. So I decided to wash our black Range Rover myself.

It was filthy, but after an hour or so of hard work it looked quite impressive. As a final touch, I felt the icing on the cake would be a glossy sheen courtesy of some Meguiars Quick Detailer.

So I picked up the spray bottle of Autoglym Interior Shampoo instead and liberally sprayed the outside of the car with it, before smearing it about with a microfiber cloth, wondering why it wouldn't shine.

I now have a Santorini Black Range Rover that looks like someone has greased it before roasting it in the oven. It looks horrible and even re-washing it hasn't brought it up.

Has anyone else deliberately or otherwise used a completely inappropriate product to repair or clean the car with disastrous consequences?

BrettMRC

4,087 posts

160 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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The headlights on my first soarer were in a right state...borrowed some cleaning material from work to give them a wipe in the carpark at lunch.

I'd picked up a special brew of TRIKE and MEK and practically melted the drivers side light unit in a single wipe.

I think I nearly cried with shock and shame hehe

thebraketester

14,225 posts

138 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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I used half a can of brake cleaner trying to de-ice my windscreen last week, before realising a) it wasn't working and b) why did it smell odd.

designforlife

3,734 posts

163 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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One of my old co-workers walked out to his car during lunch break with a kitchen sponge and, wait for it... a bottle of shower gel.

I walked after him to see what on earth he was doing, it was also absolutely chucking down with rain outside.

He proceeded to enthusiastically wash his battered old VW Passat with the kitchen sponge and liberal amounts of shower gel, he said to me "I do it in the rain so that I don't have to rinse it off".

laugh

100% true, still amazes me 7 years later.

Chrismawa

553 posts

100 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
quotequote all
designforlife said:
One of my old co-workers walked out to his car during lunch break with a kitchen sponge and, wait for it... a bottle of shower gel.

I walked after him to see what on earth he was doing, it was also absolutely chucking down with rain outside.

He proceeded to enthusiastically wash his battered old VW Passat with the kitchen sponge and liberal amounts of shower gel, he said to me "I do it in the rain so that I don't have to rinse it off".

laugh

100% true, still amazes me 7 years later.
Years ago a lad washed a colleagues car with a scourer! Needsless to say the colleague wasn't impressed!

psi310398

9,085 posts

203 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
quotequote all
designforlife said:
One of my old co-workers walked out to his car during lunch break with a kitchen sponge and, wait for it... a bottle of shower gel.

I walked after him to see what on earth he was doing, it was also absolutely chucking down with rain outside.

He proceeded to enthusiastically wash his battered old VW Passat with the kitchen sponge and liberal amounts of shower gel, he said to me "I do it in the rain so that I don't have to rinse it off".

laugh

100% true, still amazes me 7 years later.
That said, some people swear by hair conditioner to shine their cars better than bespoke car products (according to them)...

zafbandicoot

47 posts

65 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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Car was filthy i was at the MIL house..
Bought a sponge from wilkos and used red fairy liquid in squirted straight onto the car and rubbed off. Hose pipe no jet wash. A poor mans clean.
Car had never ever looked cleaner. And it stayed cleaner for longer. Dust didn't stick as easily. The alloys didn't get dusty for a week!
Made me want to chuck the snow foam machine and big selection of shampoos in the bin when i got home,

timbo999

1,293 posts

255 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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Used toothpaste to clean the scuff mark off the bumper of a hire car as nothing else was to hand... worked really well, but it was Australian toothpaste.

Mrs Timbo used a kitchen scourer to clean bird poo off her car bonnet... that didn't end so well.

Paul671

335 posts

207 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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Bit of Pledge furniture polish would shine up the wheels on my first car quite nicely!

Alex_225

6,261 posts

201 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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I've known two people clean off dirt with a kitchen scourer, both morons and both leaving dull patches where the scourer scratched the hell out of the lacquer.

I admit back in the early 90s, my mum used to task me with cleaning her MK3 Ford Escort. I was loaded up with a bucket with Fairy Liquid, a sponge and bucket. I was also handed the brush from the dust pan and told to use that on the bottoms of the doors, lovely and scratchy. Then to cap it off, dry it with a roll of kitchen roll rather than a nice chamois!

I did once pick up a bottle of Autoglym Odour Eliminator and go to clean my windows with it, almost the same colour label as their glass cleaner. No adverse effects though!

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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I have used furniture polish before to polish the car it does a fine job,and washing up liquid seems to get the paint very clean my theory is it strips away dirty car wax.So a good way to prepare it for a polish of your choice.

J1JPE

296 posts

226 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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Bog brush inside wash mitt to remove brake dust on inside of alloys => nasty cheap wire inside brush poke through and scratched wheels.

PositronicRay

27,010 posts

183 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
quotequote all
designforlife said:
One of my old co-workers walked out to his car during lunch break with a kitchen sponge and, wait for it... a bottle of shower gel.

I walked after him to see what on earth he was doing, it was also absolutely chucking down with rain outside.

He proceeded to enthusiastically wash his battered old VW Passat with the kitchen sponge and liberal amounts of shower gel, he said to me "I do it in the rain so that I don't have to rinse it off".

laugh

100% true, still amazes me 7 years later.
Did it work though?

Jaguar steve

9,232 posts

210 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
quotequote all
zafbandicoot said:
Car was filthy i was at the MIL house..
Bought a sponge from wilkos and used red fairy liquid in squirted straight onto the car and rubbed off. Hose pipe no jet wash. A poor mans clean.
Car had never ever looked cleaner. And it stayed cleaner for longer. Dust didn't stick as easily. The alloys didn't get dusty for a week!
Made me want to chuck the snow foam machine and big selection of shampoos in the bin when i got home,
yes I use washing up liquid too and neat petrol on tar or grease spots, because nothing else gets even close for a really quick and efficient clean.

There's a box of redundant Autoglym and Meguirs and Bilt Hamber polishes and waxes on the shelf which I don't use anymore as I find all these products leave a film on paintwork that works just like a dust magnet.

pfnsht

2,172 posts

175 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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Chrismawa said:
Years ago a lad washed a colleagues car with a scourer! Needsless to say the colleague wasn't impressed!
Ditto my step Dad allowed someone's son who wanted a bit of pocket money clean his fairly new Rover 200, many years ago now but it was ruined.

Wouldn't polish out and he couldn't sell it. Ended up giving the car away to a family member. I'd guess with a rotary it probably would have polsihed out.

The only bad thing I've done happened whilst cleaning my Mum's car as a kid where I used some old paint like tyre dressor on the tyres and got it on the hub cabs leaving actual black paint like brush marks on her silver wheel trims. I remeber it having tyre dressor on the tin. She was not best pleased.



romeodelta

1,119 posts

161 months

Thursday 12th December 2019
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I was taught to clean the car with a sweeping brush and washing up liquid.

Oh the shame.

Big_Dog

974 posts

185 months

Thursday 12th December 2019
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I used to use pledge with lemon on my bike fairing after watching a chap with a motorbike shop do the same. Worked like a charm.