car washing tips

Author
Discussion

flattotheboards

Original Poster:

6,681 posts

207 months

Monday 4th June 2007
quotequote all
ill start, when i wash the car i always wash a section at a time then rinse it off then wash it again to make sure i havent missed any parts. any more tips?

jatinder

1,667 posts

214 months

Monday 4th June 2007
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SS HSV

9,641 posts

259 months

Monday 4th June 2007
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2) Don't wash it whent the sun is beating down.

m3evo2

2,064 posts

209 months

Monday 4th June 2007
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3) Dont use a brillo pad to remove bird poo.

snotrag

14,479 posts

212 months

Monday 4th June 2007
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Vac the inside first... So you dont end up plonking the Vacuum cleaner in a big puddle, shorting it out and killing the power to the rest of the house...

rolleyes

Xenocide

4,286 posts

209 months

Monday 4th June 2007
quotequote all
snotrag said:
Vac the inside first... So you dont end up plonking the Vacuum cleaner in a big puddle, shorting it out and killing the power to the rest of the house...

rolleyes
How do you know about this?

Greensleeves

1,235 posts

204 months

Monday 4th June 2007
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Get SFE to wash it.

Greensleeves

1,235 posts

204 months

Monday 4th June 2007
quotequote all
jatinder said:
WTF claying?

Am I just not in to this or simply missing something. Is it a professional term dor something else?

When I was a young un, we used to clay cars and if you got a long enough stick, you could get them from about 200 yards off. An inch ball of clay on the end of a 3 or 4 foot stick was about ideal and with practice you could easily get a car from over 100 yards, double decker buses were a sitting duck.

See also "shit sticking" for different results.

PJ S

10,842 posts

228 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
snotrag said:
Vac the inside first... So you dont end up plonking the Vacuum cleaner in a big puddle, shorting it out and killing the power to the rest of the house...

rolleyes

belleair302

6,851 posts

208 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
If you wash your car with a mitt and two buckets, dry with a waffle weave towel and then rub your hand across a panel you can feel the surface is not smooth....it is rough and stubbly. Over time contaminates attach themselves to the surface and claying a car is how to remove these. Auto clay is like blu tac, you roll the clay into a ball, flatten it into an 8-10cm disc, use the correct lubricant and rub across the bodywork to remone contaminates. Keep lubricating, and re rolling the clay. 15-20 mins later you have beautifully smooth paintwork, ready for re-washing and then drying, polishing, glazing, sealing and waxing with Carnauba wax. Its simple.
Greensleeves said:
jatinder said:
WTF claying?

Am I just not in to this or simply missing something. Is it a professional term dor something else?

When I was a young un, we used to clay cars and if you got a long enough stick, you could get them from about 200 yards off. An inch ball of clay on the end of a 3 or 4 foot stick was about ideal and with practice you could easily get a car from over 100 yards, double decker buses were a sitting duck.

See also "shit sticking" for different results.

john_r

8,353 posts

272 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
My tuppence worth:

Don't use car wash soap with loads of crappy additives such as polish, 'extra glossy finish' or 'streak free drying'. Just use basic but decent quality auto wash and apply a polish afterwards.

Avoid alloy wheel cleaning sprays like the plague! (unless you want your brake caliper paint to corrode and any non alloy surfaces on the wheels, such as plastic or painted centre caps, to fade and crack)

And the obvious one - never buy a black car (as I always do rolleyes) and never wash the car in the sun.

ETA: I buy all my stuff here, as do a lot of the pro valeters! http://www.autobritedirect.co.uk/shop/ Half the price of Halfrauds and twice the quality!

Edited by john_r on Tuesday 5th June 08:55

morebeanz

3,283 posts

237 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
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john_r said:
Avoid alloy wheel cleaning sprays like the plague! (unless you want your brake caliper paint to corrode and any non alloy surfaces on the wheels, such as plastic or painted centre caps, to fade and crack)
If you use a non-acid wheel cleaner, you'll be fine. Most of the more niche cleaners are not acid based, and so don't destroy either your alloys or your calipers. smile

john_r

8,353 posts

272 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
morebeanz said:
john_r said:
Avoid alloy wheel cleaning sprays like the plague! (unless you want your brake caliper paint to corrode and any non alloy surfaces on the wheels, such as plastic or painted centre caps, to fade and crack)
If you use a non-acid wheel cleaner, you'll be fine. Most of the more niche cleaners are not acid based, and so don't destroy either your alloys or your calipers. smile
Yes, a lesson I learned with the Evo - calipers turned from PostBox Red to Barbie Pink after about 5-6 washes using off the shelf alloy cleaners! Wasn't cheap to fix either!

The Griffalo

72,857 posts

240 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
belleair302 said:
If you wash your car with a mitt and two buckets, dry with a waffle weave towel and then rub your hand across a panel you can feel the surface is not smooth....it is rough and stubbly. Over time contaminates attach themselves to the surface and claying a car is how to remove these. Auto clay is like blu tac, you roll the clay into a ball, flatten it into an 8-10cm disc, use the correct lubricant and rub across the bodywork to remone contaminates. Keep lubricating, and re rolling the clay. 15-20 mins later you have beautifully smooth paintwork, ready for re-washing and then drying, polishing, glazing, sealing and waxing with Carnauba wax. Its simple.
Greensleeves said:
jatinder said:
WTF claying?

Am I just not in to this or simply missing something. Is it a professional term dor something else?

When I was a young un, we used to clay cars and if you got a long enough stick, you could get them from about 200 yards off. An inch ball of clay on the end of a 3 or 4 foot stick was about ideal and with practice you could easily get a car from over 100 yards, double decker buses were a sitting duck.

See also "shit sticking" for different results.
15-20 mins? rofl Took me an entire day to clay mine properly yes

belleair302

6,851 posts

208 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
15-20 mins? Took me an entire day to clay mine properly

I don't know what you drive, but a 5-series can be done from top to bottom in less than an hour!!!!

The Griffalo

72,857 posts

240 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
A Griff.... First time it had been done in probably ten years but to get it perfect required a lot of patience. Still well worth the effort yes

belleair302

6,851 posts

208 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
The preparation before the polish and wax is what makes the paint shine and claying a car twice a year is all that is required. Are you happy with your Griff's paintwork after the clay?

TonyHetherington

32,091 posts

251 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...

See this topic! It's a "tell me how to wash my car" thread and covers exactly what you so desire.

Hope it helps
T

The Griffalo

72,857 posts

240 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
belleair302 said:
The preparation before the polish and wax is what makes the paint shine and claying a car twice a year is all that is required. Are you happy with your Griff's paintwork after the clay?
After four and a half days polishing with a clay bar, scratchX, HD Clense and Carnuba wax it's as smooth as it'll ever get biggrin


john_r

8,353 posts

272 months

Tuesday 5th June 2007
quotequote all
The Griffalo said:
belleair302 said:
The preparation before the polish and wax is what makes the paint shine and claying a car twice a year is all that is required. Are you happy with your Griff's paintwork after the clay?
After four and a half days polishing with a clay bar, scratchX, HD Clense and Carnuba wax it's as smooth as it'll ever get biggrin
Amd it's the perfect colour too! thumbup