Best Car Wash Method
#61
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
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5thGen Texan (12-19-2022)
The following 3 users liked this post by Drew46:
#63
#64
#65
My world is perfectly fine. What is normal to me, is usually very disturbing to every-day people; been like that my whole life, I'm used to it. While not being able to get a passport is normal to me, it isn't to regular people, and I couldn't care less who knows it or doesn't. I'm not ashamed of who I am. Don't know how many people agree with you besides maybe one, but think what you want. How about you leave me be and we get back on topic and discuss car washing/care techniques without bashing the people who do it differently than you do?
#66
Rennlist Member
My world is perfectly fine. What is normal to me, is usually very disturbing to every-day people; been like that my whole life, I'm used to it. While not being able to get a passport is normal to me, it isn't to regular people, and I couldn't care less who knows it or doesn't. I'm not ashamed of who I am. Don't know how many people agree with you besides maybe one, but think what you want. How about you leave me be and we get back on topic and discuss car washing/care techniques without bashing the people who do it differently than you do?
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Smirnoff67 (01-26-2023)
#67
Rennlist Member
My world is perfectly fine. What is normal to me, is usually very disturbing to every-day people; been like that my whole life, I'm used to it. While not being able to get a passport is normal to me, it isn't to regular people, and I couldn't care less who knows it or doesn't. I'm not ashamed of who I am. Don't know how many people agree with you besides maybe one, but think what you want. How about you leave me be and we get back on topic and discuss car washing/care techniques without bashing the people who do it differently than you do?
Bashing seems to be his thing apparently. Meanwhile he is swirling his paint more and more by constantly touching it with the older methods of washing cars and spending more time doing it than us “morons” that PPFd/ceramic coated etc.
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Smirnoff67 (12-19-2022)
#68
Having my cars PPF'd and ceramic coated has certainly made my life easier, that's for sure. And they look amazing. I highly recommend it. But, people have to do what they're comfortable doing...different strokes for different folks.
#69
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Ok folks, let those of you who are into this washing thing go back to doing it and the rest of us can find other things to do with our time. Let's chill please. Thanks
siberian
siberian
#70
Racer
I figured that since we have snow on the ground, it would be a good day to wash the marshmallow car
#71
Rennlist Member
Griots makes a good foam cannon and products to go with it. Best advice with any foam is to apply to dry finish (of course not in the sun) and let sit for no longer than 5 minutes. Apply in sweeping motion from bottom to top. Rinse using same process, bottom to top. If you do this regularly you can keep the car very clean. If you need to hand wash, foaming is a good prewash but be sure to reverse order the wash process, meaning top to bottom, saving wheels and baseboards for last. DO NOT wash in circular motion, instead in straight sweep.
You start with the cleanest and most visible sections (roof, glass, hood, trunk) and work your way down to the dirtiest and least visible (top of sides, bottom of sides, rear, front) and ending with wheels, wheel wells, and rocker panels. Keeps micro scratches to a minimum. Everything else is secondary.
But the absolute best car wash method is paying someone who knows what they're doing to come wash your car(s) at your home.
#72
Rennlist Member
The only guy who actually answered the question and got it right.
You start with the cleanest and most visible sections (roof, glass, hood, trunk) and work your way down to the dirtiest and least visible (top of sides, bottom of sides, rear, front) and ending with wheels, wheel wells, and rocker panels. Keeps micro scratches to a minimum. Everything else is secondary.
But the absolute best car wash method is paying someone who knows what they're doing to come wash your car(s) at your home.
You start with the cleanest and most visible sections (roof, glass, hood, trunk) and work your way down to the dirtiest and least visible (top of sides, bottom of sides, rear, front) and ending with wheels, wheel wells, and rocker panels. Keeps micro scratches to a minimum. Everything else is secondary.
But the absolute best car wash method is paying someone who knows what they're doing to come wash your car(s) at your home.
And foam cannons are for show. Waste of time IMHO.
#73
Man.. What a thread. Srf409 has some valid points and I'll admit I laughed out loud (literally) because he nailed some things on the head but not everything. His delivery isn't the most friendly.
The high school dropout and meth head comment... Yeah I'm going to have to somewhat agree with this. There are a lot of shmucks in the industry. I know it sounds mean and so f'ed up but I've experienced this more than once.. On my own car. I paid for and took my car back off the hands of a very high end local detail shop and I was PISSED to say the least. They even had the nerve to ask for a tip. Paying over $2000 dollars for a full detail and paint correction only to have a meth head hand you your keys and the job being botched is pissening. Again. Plus tip lol.
I was a hobby detailer since I got my first car at age 16. One day, years later when I needed a job I saw an opening at a huge dealership for pro detailer. Not the car porter, run it through the wash position but actual paint correction and restoring interiors/exteriors. Think AMMO NYC type of jobs. Being on the east coast I dealt with some nasty cars. Rust, corrosion etc. I would transform trade-ins and the sales advisors all used to praise me. My bosses hated me and I ultimately got let go because I would take anywhere from 4-8 hours per car. They didn't seem to grasp the concept and definition of the world DETAIL. I get it though, it's a car sales business after all so I don't blame them. I took it too serious. It was more play time and extreme obsession to me. It was hypnotizing. I took advantage of having my own dedicated bay, tools and products at my disposal. I could spend 10-15 minutes cleaning one used wash mit and keep finding tiny hard specs that could scratch your car. II could see why I got let go, I was experimenting on the job. I can only imagine what it looked like watching me stand in front a sink forever while I was cleaning a mit or towel. Probably thought I was high. I ended up getting hired at a Ferrari dealer and that was quite the experience but short lived as I moved shortly after.
With that aside, ceramic coats, foam cannons, and pressure washers are not BS. They're legitimate 100%. Every product has it's true purpose. However, if you're a pro and truly into show car/concours level detailing then a good old fashioned Carnuba wax trumps any ceramic coat. Still, you have to use proper prep. If you're good enough, **** enough and can stay on top of it then you deserve props because I don't have that patience. So in reality ceramic coats are the best.
Swirls are real. Touching the paint without proper prep or care for your wash mits/towels will scratch and swirl your paint. No question. Grit guards work. Can it be overkill and wasteful? Absolutely, but it's proper. You can do whatever you want with your car, but if you're constantly washing it using poor technique your paint will look like **** and you'll be going in for polishing and paint correction far more often and you will end up spending the same money, if not more... Then you'll be dealing with those crackhead drop outs srf409 is talking about... So back to my original story, you can see why I was truly mad as a former pro detailer when I got my botched detailing job car back from a "high end" detailer who has weirdos doing the work while he's on a beach somewhere getting jerked off by his wife. Ever since that day I swore off ever going to another detailer again unless they're world renowned and that's going to cost bukoo bucks.
To the guy who brought up Nick Murray.. Nick Murray is an idiot and a youtube jester. He even knew it when he made a carwash video.
Matt Moreman from Obsessed Garage is awesome. His videos may be long, but I can beat to that drum so I'll watch them. He sells great products.
All in all I've saved thousands upon thousands of dollars by buying all my own products and doing my own washes (so can you)... Getting these cars washed on a regular basis ain't cheap. There's a Porsche tax. There's no need to be paying someone to do your own work as a man. That someone is going more than likely to be some pompous douche "detailer" that you're paying to wash your car. Be a man You're not "too busy" and don't act or pretend that your time saved is more valuable as if you're going to be doing something else that's making you more money. That's pure cope and some capitalist american nonsense.
I went a little off the rail with this post, but those who can relate know what's up.
The high school dropout and meth head comment... Yeah I'm going to have to somewhat agree with this. There are a lot of shmucks in the industry. I know it sounds mean and so f'ed up but I've experienced this more than once.. On my own car. I paid for and took my car back off the hands of a very high end local detail shop and I was PISSED to say the least. They even had the nerve to ask for a tip. Paying over $2000 dollars for a full detail and paint correction only to have a meth head hand you your keys and the job being botched is pissening. Again. Plus tip lol.
I was a hobby detailer since I got my first car at age 16. One day, years later when I needed a job I saw an opening at a huge dealership for pro detailer. Not the car porter, run it through the wash position but actual paint correction and restoring interiors/exteriors. Think AMMO NYC type of jobs. Being on the east coast I dealt with some nasty cars. Rust, corrosion etc. I would transform trade-ins and the sales advisors all used to praise me. My bosses hated me and I ultimately got let go because I would take anywhere from 4-8 hours per car. They didn't seem to grasp the concept and definition of the world DETAIL. I get it though, it's a car sales business after all so I don't blame them. I took it too serious. It was more play time and extreme obsession to me. It was hypnotizing. I took advantage of having my own dedicated bay, tools and products at my disposal. I could spend 10-15 minutes cleaning one used wash mit and keep finding tiny hard specs that could scratch your car. II could see why I got let go, I was experimenting on the job. I can only imagine what it looked like watching me stand in front a sink forever while I was cleaning a mit or towel. Probably thought I was high. I ended up getting hired at a Ferrari dealer and that was quite the experience but short lived as I moved shortly after.
With that aside, ceramic coats, foam cannons, and pressure washers are not BS. They're legitimate 100%. Every product has it's true purpose. However, if you're a pro and truly into show car/concours level detailing then a good old fashioned Carnuba wax trumps any ceramic coat. Still, you have to use proper prep. If you're good enough, **** enough and can stay on top of it then you deserve props because I don't have that patience. So in reality ceramic coats are the best.
Swirls are real. Touching the paint without proper prep or care for your wash mits/towels will scratch and swirl your paint. No question. Grit guards work. Can it be overkill and wasteful? Absolutely, but it's proper. You can do whatever you want with your car, but if you're constantly washing it using poor technique your paint will look like **** and you'll be going in for polishing and paint correction far more often and you will end up spending the same money, if not more... Then you'll be dealing with those crackhead drop outs srf409 is talking about... So back to my original story, you can see why I was truly mad as a former pro detailer when I got my botched detailing job car back from a "high end" detailer who has weirdos doing the work while he's on a beach somewhere getting jerked off by his wife. Ever since that day I swore off ever going to another detailer again unless they're world renowned and that's going to cost bukoo bucks.
To the guy who brought up Nick Murray.. Nick Murray is an idiot and a youtube jester. He even knew it when he made a carwash video.
Matt Moreman from Obsessed Garage is awesome. His videos may be long, but I can beat to that drum so I'll watch them. He sells great products.
All in all I've saved thousands upon thousands of dollars by buying all my own products and doing my own washes (so can you)... Getting these cars washed on a regular basis ain't cheap. There's a Porsche tax. There's no need to be paying someone to do your own work as a man. That someone is going more than likely to be some pompous douche "detailer" that you're paying to wash your car. Be a man You're not "too busy" and don't act or pretend that your time saved is more valuable as if you're going to be doing something else that's making you more money. That's pure cope and some capitalist american nonsense.
I went a little off the rail with this post, but those who can relate know what's up.
#74
Rennlist Member
This is what I do as well with the adder that my big bucket is one of those Simoniz branded units with the plastic grate at the bottom of it to remove standing dirt from the water and using a second bucket for wheels only…and a big shaggy Armourall car wash mitt (rather than sponge) which doubles as a puppet to make the neighbor’s kids smile when I “talk “ to them with it. Because my cars are ceramic coated, I use a cap full of non stripping ( Maguires in my case) car wash agent in the water. Would be curious to hear what others add in the water for ceramic treated cars.
#75
Rennlist Member
There's no need to be paying someone to do your own work as a man. That someone is going more than likely to be some pompous douche "detailer" that you're paying to wash your car. Be a man You're not "too busy" and don't act or pretend that your time saved is more valuable as if you're going to be doing something else that's making you more money. That's pure cope and some capitalist american nonsense.
You sound young and you certainly have a lot of time on your hands. I'm 50 and very lucky to find myself in a situation where I can chose how to spend my time. I prefer to track my cars, travel, spend time with my family, build businesses and lead my teams over cleaning. You know, real sissy stuff. More so than some guy from the internet, I agree with Ferry Porsche: "made to be driven, not polished". Also, I'm not American.