Washing your car in the Winter
Posted: Mon Dec 17, 2007 12:24 am
Due to the weather being so inclement, washing your car becomes a pain, but a HUGE necessity in keeping it not only clean, but also protected. All the snow, ice, sand, salt and other items can just be torturous to your paint and body. So I put together a few things that should help you this winter.Rule 1, never, ever use a brush wash drive thruDon't do it, resist the urge to get clean for $5 by pulling in and pulling out. Your doing more harm than good. Just think of all the other muddy, sandy cars that pulled through those brushes and pads being slapped and dragged across your car. Your essentially bathing in their leftovers. It's probably the easiest way to ruin your finish and leave you with lots of work to do in the spring. So just stay away from these places.Hands Free is your friendThere are several styles of this kind of car wash. One is the separate bays where you pull in, use their power washer and soap to clean your baby off. Be sure when you are washing to bring lots of quarters as a 3:00 round is not enough. Take that sprayer and be sure to start from the bottom up, yes the bottom up. If you start spraying from the top down all that runoff coming down the sides of your vehicle will gunk up with the dried stuff lower down and leave all kinds of fun marks and swirls. If you start from the bottom and go across then up in a donkey kong ladder kind of fashion, you will remove more dirt and sand and stuff than from the top down. Also be very sure to get down and spray underneath your car really really good. Don't hesitate when steam pours from the hot exhaust, spraying underneath will clean off any salt or sand gunked up, lessening the corrosion. Don't forget to hit the wheels and brakes getting all that nastiness out of there as well.Time for another rule. Do Not use their brushes! I don't care what their little sign says about your own buckets and sponges. I bring my own mitt. Once the car is rinsed, you can soap it up with the gun and soap the mitt quick, then go over the car periodically resoaping spots to keep it wet. Once the car is covered and sudsy, go ahead and add some more quarters cause you wanna make sure when removing the soap that you get it all out, leaving nothing. Be sure to spray your panel gaps and other areas to ensure all the soapy water is out. Frozen soap is not fun to remove.Once the car is all rinsed off, you can go about drying. In the winter I tend to use the water blade for removal as the temperatures are so cold that a towel or chamois does not absorb as well. Remove most of the water with the blade and then towel off the rest.Quote, originally posted by ColonelPanic »Thought I'd add something... when drying... I make it a point to never forget to fully dry off the inside of the doors, the door sills/jambs and all of the weatherstripping associated with them. Keeps all the doors from freezing up! I always do that anyway, but make it a point to pay extra attention in the winter.The other Hands FreeI have had good experience with this one. A Mobil station near my house has a touchless carwash. You basically pull in, doors close and you park. A big L-shaped arm goes around your car rinsing, and soaps with a special leave on chemical. Then it coats it again, then it sprays clean and you drive through the other door slowly as the airblasts your car dry. I typically pull around and dry off what it missed but for the $7 it costs for a good wash, it is well worth it and you stay much dryer and warmer in the process.I would typically reserve this for when your car is lightly covered in crap. If it is pretty bad looking and your car is two different colors of brown and white, then I would wait for a sunny weekend day and hit the DIY wash mentioned above. The Best WayWhich I'm sorry to say I don't have, is a garage made for this at your house. You spray off the car outside getting the nasty off, then drive it in, and continue with the cleaning. An indoor hose with warm water, a light spray, and a drain system to allow your floow to dry quickly. This is ideal since you can work at your own pace, and do a really proper regular wash as if it were summer. However most of us do not have this setup as most environmental laws nowadays require special drains and pumps for the runoff. No longer can you connect to the city sewer. If I had cash, this would be me, but I guess I have to resort to the other methods above until I get rich.I hope you got some insight on this, it is pretty standard but there are a few things I hope you take into account, namely not using the car wash brushes, and not going to those $5 drive throughs. Enjoy! and have a safe winter!