For those of you who try to get swirl marks off your car, as your resident OCD car detailer, just wanted to point out after the heavy rain a lot of the country saw last week (Thursday was the really bad day), you may have noticed a layer of sand like debris on your paintwork...
Be warned, that this will easily inflict swirls (regular readers of my posts will know that just a normal bucket and sponge wash will inflict swirls but this sand could really cause them)...so, my advice for what it's worth...
If you don't want to go as mad I did to remove it (yea yes mad I know!)....here's the very small routine....:
- Pressure wash the entire car before touching it
- Treat yourself to a second bucket (ideally with grit guards, but that's not the very small routine I'm describing)
- Bucket one your wash solution
- Bucket two fresh clean water
- Re-rinse the car
- Wash car from top downwards, using ideally a wash mitt (or can I say it, a very clean sponge (oh the pain))....
- Press lightly.
- Return your mitt to the second bucket (with rinse water), and thoroughly ring out your mitt.
- Remove and squeeze out the excess water
- Return to wash solution bucket....
- Repeat on all panels - if you see muck on your wash media - STOP - and rinse it in the rinse bucket
- If you see the rinse bucket getting dirty/murkey - STOP and throw away the water, rinse the bucket, and then re-fill with fresh clean water
- After washing the entire car, rinse off using the Pressure Washer
- Dry with a soft drying towel
If you want to take it up one level that will help you minimise the risk of swirls further, pre-rinse with Snowfoam (Autobrite Magifoam is my recommendation).
Another level, de-contam first using APC ..
Oh I could go on and on and on!
But please be careful with that paint, the sand on your car is course, further rain will not have removed it properly however much it looks like it has!
Regards,
Clive.
Be warned, that this will easily inflict swirls (regular readers of my posts will know that just a normal bucket and sponge wash will inflict swirls but this sand could really cause them)...so, my advice for what it's worth...
If you don't want to go as mad I did to remove it (yea yes mad I know!)....here's the very small routine....:
- Pressure wash the entire car before touching it
- Treat yourself to a second bucket (ideally with grit guards, but that's not the very small routine I'm describing)
- Bucket one your wash solution
- Bucket two fresh clean water
- Re-rinse the car
- Wash car from top downwards, using ideally a wash mitt (or can I say it, a very clean sponge (oh the pain))....
- Press lightly.
- Return your mitt to the second bucket (with rinse water), and thoroughly ring out your mitt.
- Remove and squeeze out the excess water
- Return to wash solution bucket....
- Repeat on all panels - if you see muck on your wash media - STOP - and rinse it in the rinse bucket
- If you see the rinse bucket getting dirty/murkey - STOP and throw away the water, rinse the bucket, and then re-fill with fresh clean water
- After washing the entire car, rinse off using the Pressure Washer
- Dry with a soft drying towel
If you want to take it up one level that will help you minimise the risk of swirls further, pre-rinse with Snowfoam (Autobrite Magifoam is my recommendation).
Another level, de-contam first using APC ..
Oh I could go on and on and on!
But please be careful with that paint, the sand on your car is course, further rain will not have removed it properly however much it looks like it has!
Regards,
Clive.
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