pwmin Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 i always use absorbers, even though white towels are better for your car. i've used it so many times and it works great. soaks up way more water than leather or chomois or other drying rags i've used. i usually hit it with the water blade first and then go over it with the absorber. absorbers are supposed to be kept wet Quote
Euro Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 yeah mine stay damp from being in the little tube it comes in, but theres still streaks and crap when i go over it..... so im faithful to the water blade and towel Quote
19Cutlass94 Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 How well does that water blade thingy work? Always wondered that but never really wanted to "test" it out. Quote
pwmin Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 it's just a squeegee for your car. it doesnt get all the water off, but it gets a lot off more quickly than a towel does. Quote
THe_DeTAiL3R Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 The main thing here is to not let it dry in direct sunlight, cause that bakes on the waterspots! Quote
19Cutlass94 Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 Well I always pull the car in the garage before drying it off, but to do like a perfect job drying it, takes me like 3 hours with the chamois Quote
THe_DeTAiL3R Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 LOL.. I'd only spend that much time if it was a show car or something. Red is a pretty easy color to keep clean looking though. Quote
Euro Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 yeah i try to dry it off as best i can...best way to prevent rust from forming the waterblade takes off 95% of the water on the big areas...hood, roof, trunk, windows, etc its alot easier and it saves towel's..... Quote
19Cutlass94 Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 yeah thats the thing though, thats everything, dorr jams, inside trunk, under hood, all the spots I can possibly get with a chamois. But every once and a while it does see car shows soo.... But Ill have to pull up an article I found about this kinda stuff. See if I can find it Quote
Euro Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 yep i dry EVERY part of the car.....under the hood, door jambs, in the gullies around the trunk...everything those trophies/shows are addicting lol Quote
mfewtrail Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 Throw a inline filter on your water hose(check ebay, they're usually cheaper on there than most places) and it will cut down on water spots a great deal. Quote
Brian P Posted September 22, 2005 Report Posted September 22, 2005 just take off your wiper blade and use that to get the major water off. Quote
frusciante fan Posted September 24, 2005 Report Posted September 24, 2005 i air-dry after washing at 75mph. no problems. Quote
19Cutlass94 Posted September 25, 2005 Report Posted September 25, 2005 haha well thats one way to do it. I washed my car friday night, spend about 3 hours on it, today I spend about another 3, and I still need to get the rest of the interior, and a little more under the hood, and vaccum the trunk. All this is getting ready for the show next weekend Quote
Garrett Powered Posted September 25, 2005 Report Posted September 25, 2005 Everything told on here are good idears. IMO. all is true especially the Meguires Quik Clay Detailing system. Makes paint smooth as glass! All you need to do is wash the car and rub your hand on the paint when it is wet and you will feel anywhere that it is not smooth, spray it with the mist provided and rub with a little piece of clay. works on glass too just as good as steel wool to get off overspray. The best thing about the clay though is the fact that it cant harm your paint unlike anything else you rub on your paint. because it isn't bathtowel or microfiber that scratches your paint, it is contaminants that scratch it. The clay absorbs and hold abrasive micro contaminates unlike polishing compounds. Quote
Gearhead43 Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 Gearhead43(dave) uses compressed air to dry his car....damn thats gotta work great, but expensive are you sure he doesn't use an air compressor? :shurg: little cans of that stuff for computers.. right Smart ass... I use compressed air from an 5 Gal Air compressor... Still do .. But If its windy or very hot outside I'll just use the shammy! Quote
THe_DeTAiL3R Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 Okay this is what I do to get cars COMPLETLY DRY, which I often have to do if I'm gonna paint seal them.. 1. Use a waterblade over the entire car... or if it has fresh paint just use it on the windows. This really removes water faster than a chamois. 2. Use a chamois quickly over the car to get what the waterblade didn't get. 3. Use a DIRTY chamois in the door jams, trunklid, and hood (usually I just do the front of it cause the rest it goes away on it's own). Dirty because often there will be tar/undercoating in those areas. 4. Compressed air to blow out all remaining water that hides in mouldings, mirrors, rubber/weatherstripping around the rest of the car. 5. Use a chamois one last time to get any water off from the compressed air... Or if it's a nice sunny warm day I'll just waterblade it and put it outside with the doors/trunk/hood open for an hour or 2 so nature car dry it. Quote
97loudcut Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 wow i cannot belive people use things other than microfiber on your car. ARE YOU INSANE? BTW you can get 24 microfiber towesla t COSTCO for like 12 bucks. Microfiber is the way to go...it takes me 3 towels to dry my whole car. There great for everything. You can literally get them wet and clean anything. If anyone disagress with me I would like to see some 10 yr. old black paint that has more shine than mine. See Kennsington pics if your curious. Quote
THe_DeTAiL3R Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 Yeah.. chamois scratches paint Leave waterspots? maybe.... Microfibre cloth AFTER chamois should be perfectly fine to get everything off without damaging the paint. I don't care how shiney your car is, drying is only part of it... Quote
1990lumina Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 Yeah.. chamois scratches paint Leave waterspots? maybe.... Microfibre cloth AFTER chamois should be perfectly fine to get everything off without damaging the paint. I don't care how shiney your car is, drying is only part of it... Though I don't really care about my paint...it came full of scratches, so it can stay that way for all I care. Hell I used to use shop towels to dry my car.... Quote
97loudcut Posted May 21, 2006 Report Posted May 21, 2006 Yeah.. chamois scratches paint Leave waterspots? maybe.... Microfibre cloth AFTER chamois should be perfectly fine to get everything off without damaging the paint. I don't care how shiney your car is, drying is only part of it... im talking about the other uses for microfiber like polishing, buffing, and interior cleaning. hence the "they're great for everything" dont skim Quote
19Cutlass94 Posted May 22, 2006 Report Posted May 22, 2006 everytime Im done washing my car, I go over it with mothers Showtime. Works great. Leaves no water spots nothing. Chamois dont scratch the paint. The cheap ones, well yes its possible. Thats why when you shove out 50bucks for a new pure sheep skin ( since I believe thats what it is ) then no it doesnt scratch the paint. I duno how old this thread is I didnt go on page 3 Quote
GP1138 Posted May 22, 2006 Report Posted May 22, 2006 My routine at work is Waterblade > Chamois > Spraywax, that's if I'm delivering a sold car. Otherwise it's just the first two. Those waterblades really are great. Storebought chamoises suck ass. I don't know where the good ones come from. Quote
Euro Posted May 22, 2006 Report Posted May 22, 2006 detailer...its honestly not that hard to get rid of water spots.......... i dont see the big deal Quote
ToroToro Posted May 22, 2006 Report Posted May 22, 2006 Water blades work great, but they DO scratch the paint to a certain extent. As far as the chamois, like Jay said...the cheap ass ones scratch but otherwise they are nice. Quote
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