Cleaning Your Car (Products In Washing Machine)

Cleaning Your Car (Products In Washing Machine)

Author
Discussion

PaulCar1

Original Poster:

22 posts

24 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Hi,

I tend to be washing 1 of my cars every 3-4 days, and getting a little concerned with how much I use my washing machine to wash ‘Micro Fibre Clothes’, ‘Mits’ and ‘Drying Towels’. I use a new fresh cloth for the wheels each time and bin it due to the volume of dirt and grease, but I

Does anyone soak their gear in any special liquid before putting them in your washing machine… maybe some substance that extracts and loosens any grease before it is put in the washing machine.

C5_Steve

5,751 posts

117 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
I never used to, but GF introduced me to some stuff that goes in the washing machine specifically for microfiber towels. Chemical Guys do a product but I'm not sure if it's what we use as I let her crack on with that.

Does it make a difference? Not sure. They seem to be fluffier for longer now so I guess so. As long as you're washing them without anything like conditioner etc I think you'll be fine.

Krikkit

27,379 posts

195 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
PaulCar1 said:
I use a new fresh cloth for the wheels each time and bin it due to the volume of dirt and grease...
You must be joking, surely?

belleair302

6,967 posts

221 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
At 40c, no conditioner and a short tumble dry most microfibers etc last a good 50-60 washes, maybe longer.

PaulCar1

Original Poster:

22 posts

24 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Thanks.

My question was more about the concern of the washing machine’s health VS the clothes.

And yes, I buy micro fibre clothes in bulk which means I am throwing away €0.25c for each wash… which I can live with. I don’t want to put very very dirty clothes in with drying towels and mediocre dirty washing mits… as some of that grease will surely end up getting washed into the car again otherwise, even after a strong wash.

Sway

31,520 posts

208 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
belleair302 said:
At 40c, no conditioner and a short tumble dry most microfibers etc last a good 50-60 washes, maybe longer.
Agreed.

Even better with a proper microfiber wash liquid - we use it for regular towels too and it keeps them properly fluffy and absorbant for much longer.

Washing machine deep clean with white vinegar then a rinse cycle prior for the properly committed.

mikeswagon

796 posts

155 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
How many cars are we talking about, and what the hell are you doing with them that the cloths are getting covered in grease? biggrin


normalbloke

8,055 posts

233 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all

I did some bits while freshening up my wife’s car.

s94wht

2,094 posts

73 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
PaulCar1 said:
Thanks.

My question was more about the concern of the washing machine’s health VS the clothes.

And yes, I buy micro fibre clothes in bulk which means I am throwing away €0.25c for each wash… which I can live with. I don’t want to put very very dirty clothes in with drying towels and mediocre dirty washing mits… as some of that grease will surely end up getting washed into the car again otherwise, even after a strong wash.
It's not about the money, it's about the environment. What a waste.

Bobupndown

2,487 posts

57 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
I'm not allowed to wash "car stuff" in the washing machine. Have to wait till she's out for a couple of hours. hehe

paralla

4,569 posts

149 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
normalbloke said:

I did some bits while freshening up my wife’s car.
Love this.

Years ago I put a set of tubular exhaust manifolds from the essex V6 in my Capri on a Pots & Pans cycle in the dishwasher, they came up a treat.

These days I give the dirtiest microfibre cloths a rinse and jiggle about for a minute with some fairy liquid unbder the kitchen tap to remove the worst of the muck before throwing them in the washing machine with the bathmats or dark clothes. I've never noticed the dirt from them get transferred onto anything else. I wouldn't put them in with a load of whites.

I don't wash cars every 3 - 4 days.

PaulCar1

Original Poster:

22 posts

24 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
s94wht said:
PaulCar1 said:
Thanks.

My question was more about the concern of the washing machine’s health VS the clothes.

And yes, I buy micro fibre clothes in bulk which means I am throwing away €0.25c for each wash… which I can live with. I don’t want to put very very dirty clothes in with drying towels and mediocre dirty washing mits… as some of that grease will surely end up getting washed into the car again otherwise, even after a strong wash.
It's not about the money, it's about the environment. What a waste.
What car do you drive… curious!?

Mikebentley

7,295 posts

154 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
PaulCar1 said:
s94wht said:
PaulCar1 said:
Thanks.

My question was more about the concern of the washing machine’s health VS the clothes.

And yes, I buy micro fibre clothes in bulk which means I am throwing away €0.25c for each wash… which I can live with. I don’t want to put very very dirty clothes in with drying towels and mediocre dirty washing mits… as some of that grease will surely end up getting washed into the car again otherwise, even after a strong wash.
It's not about the money, it's about the environment. What a waste.
What car do you drive… curious!?
My educated guess would be a VW Golf. Why is it relevant?

Bezerk

422 posts

173 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
The only reason a microfibre should go near a wheel during wash is to dry it when clean.

Of course you would need to chuck it away after use because it'd be ruined.

Use a brush such as EZ Detail with car shampoo and flowing water.

All my stuff goes in the washing machine but it is not that dirty and certainly not greasy because you need to remove the worst road grime with flowing water first.


Belle427

10,450 posts

247 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
There are lots of good dedicated wheel shampoos about and also tools to do it, the wheel woolies are very good and can just be rinsed out easily.
Trick is to keep them clean so it's not such hard work every time.

V8 Animal

6,011 posts

224 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
Oh dear

Mark V GTD

2,614 posts

138 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
I clean my wheels with a microfibre and chuck it in the washing machine afterwards with the regular laundry and never had any issues.

HustleRussell

25,540 posts

174 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
s94wht said:
It's not about the money, it's about the environment. What a waste.
Yep that was my reaction

HustleRussell

25,540 posts

174 months

Thursday 10th August 2023
quotequote all
PaulCar1 said:
s94wht said:
PaulCar1 said:
Thanks.

My question was more about the concern of the washing machine’s health VS the clothes.

And yes, I buy micro fibre clothes in bulk which means I am throwing away €0.25c for each wash… which I can live with. I don’t want to put very very dirty clothes in with drying towels and mediocre dirty washing mits… as some of that grease will surely end up getting washed into the car again otherwise, even after a strong wash.
It's not about the money, it's about the environment. What a waste.
What car do you drive… curious!?
And crucially, do you discard it and get a new one every time you use it?

vikingaero

11,899 posts

183 months

Friday 11th August 2023
quotequote all
At first I was wondering if the OP was using a waterless cleaning product to clean their car/wheels. Some YouTubers are advocating using microfibre cloths to wash. For wheels I use a specific wheel wash mitt when undertaking a water wash.

Top Tip: When you finish with the water in the two bucket wash, pour it into the wheel brush bucket to soak up all the dirt from the wheel wash mitt, wheel woolies and brushes.