I don't use water to clean my car
I don't use water to clean my car
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Discussion

DuncanM

Original Poster:

7,173 posts

299 months

Thursday 9th September 2021
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Intrigued to see how this may go down on here, but I don't use water to clean my car anymore, and I bloody love it.

3 microfiber cloths
Mer polish

One cloth to dust off the car quickly.

One polish sodden cloth to clean the car.

One cloth to buff off.

My car looks great, no extra swirl marks or scratches, and no more water creeping out of nooks and crannies to annoy me.

I honestly am getting a cleaner car, and it takes no time at all really.

I use Poor Boy's wheel cleaner which needs water, so that's the only water used.

Interested in people's thoughts on this smile

thebraketester

15,285 posts

158 months

Thursday 9th September 2021
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Try it on a black car and let us know how you get on.

av185

20,464 posts

147 months

Thursday 9th September 2021
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Only works if you have no grit whatsoever on your car. Which is virtually impossible. So you will invitably be polishing grit into your paint so scratching it.

Mer polish used to be quality but now its the usual diluted substandard stuff which will last a few days at best.

Chubbyross

4,807 posts

105 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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Look closely under decent lighting. Do this over a few years and it will need correcting.

Leptons

5,479 posts

196 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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Good luck in winter.

anonymous-user

74 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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Nice car , is it a daily driver ?

How do you get mud and salt etc off it ?

Lemanandbeyond

162 posts

76 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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OK (ish) in summer if its light dust but there is still a risk of introducing swirls, in winter it will destroy the clear-coat.

I wouldn't want to do it on mine but everyone's different and if it works for you and you're happy then that's all that matters.

23.7

28,406 posts

203 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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A few yrs ago I purchased some waterless wash and wax, I always use water getmecoat


The wax bit is easy to apply and quite good. I can see it being after driving to a car show for instance, just to but a finish on an already clean car.

steveo3002

10,977 posts

194 months

Friday 10th September 2021
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good luck when its caked in mud and grit

whats the advantage here ...using an abravise polish weekly/ often instead of some soapy water? why?

DuncanM

Original Poster:

7,173 posts

299 months

Friday 10th September 2021
quotequote all
Chubbyross said:
Look closely under decent lighting. Do this over a few years and it will need correcting.
Oh definitely, however everything I've read on the subject of swirl marks, have pointed to them being inevitable, with correction needing doing once a year at least.

I'm planning on trying this through the winter and will update accordingly, the goal is laziness with a good result (so far) and I hate using water and always have!

I know it's a bit nuts and that's why I've posted, I'm incredibly pleased so far, but then perhaps I'm easily pleased too? smile

I'm not one for washing cars much, once a month, and through winter I'll be polishing and waxing to protect, again, Mer liquid wax finish.

The winter will be the test smile

DuncanM

Original Poster:

7,173 posts

299 months

Friday 10th September 2021
quotequote all
Iwantafusca said:
Nice car , is it a daily driver ?

How do you get mud and salt etc off it ?
Thank you, yes a daily driver but I'm not doing many miles since covid wfh etc smile.

I bloody love it, paintwork is very good for an 8 year old red car, I plan on doing some correction next spring, but it's very nice overall.

Dolf Stoppard

1,379 posts

142 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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How do you clean your wheels? With the same damp cloth you 'clean' the car?

mmm-five

11,978 posts

304 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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Not sure that'd work on mine, but then I actually drive the fekkin' thing in all weathers!




DuncanM

Original Poster:

7,173 posts

299 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
quotequote all
Dolf Stoppard said:
How do you clean your wheels? With the same damp cloth you 'clean' the car?
I use Poor Boy's wheel cleaner which needs water, so that's the only water used.


Smiljan

11,963 posts

217 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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Sounds very much like the OP is actually polishing his car regularly without first washing it - bizarre.

sortedcossie

889 posts

148 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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Guy opposite me did this for over 12 months on a dark grey Audi A3. The outcome wasn't pretty.

DuncanM

Original Poster:

7,173 posts

299 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
quotequote all
sortedcossie said:
Guy opposite me did this for over 12 months on a dark grey Audi A3. The outcome wasn't pretty.
Oh dear! hehe

Dolf Stoppard

1,379 posts

142 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
quotequote all
DuncanM said:
Dolf Stoppard said:
How do you clean your wheels? With the same damp cloth you 'clean' the car?
I use Poor Boy's wheel cleaner which needs water, so that's the only water used.
Sorry, missed that bit!

I genuinely don't get though how you're not damaging your paintwork. Wiping a dirty car with a damp cloth as the main method of cleaning seems entirely mental to me.

Do us a favour and start a thread on Detailing World. They'd like you over there! wink

markymarkthree

3,196 posts

191 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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Sorry if i have missed the reason but why don't you use water ?

rjfp1962

8,966 posts

93 months

Saturday 11th September 2021
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markymarkthree said:
Sorry if i have missed the reason but why don't you use water ?
He does, but apparently on the wheels only....!