Steps to washing a car?
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Steps to washing a car? S-Spy 06-23-2003, 10:39 PM
Ok I have decided to finally try to understand how to properly wash a car. I have been used to the water, soap, and then dry car wash that I have been doing for a while. I was just wondering what are the steps to a proper car wash? I think I can do some of the steps. 1. Clean car with water (I hope this is right :smile:) 2. Water and soap 3. Rinse 4. Dry 4. Wax?? 5. Claybar? I'm not quite sure guys, so help would be GREATLY appreciated. And also I always see the word polish and my question is what and how do you use polish on the car? Thanks for any help you guys can give. BullShifter 06-24-2003, 01:04 AM Never clean/wash/wax in direct sunlight 1. Quick rinse 2. Spray chemicals, scrub, rinse. bugs, wheels, tar, tires wheels wells, etc. 3. Wash main body with car wash shampoo 4. Dry with a chamois, all crack, door & trunk jambs, gas filler door, etc. 5. Clay bar to remove contaminants(clay bar=cleaner) 6. Polish 7. Glaze 8. Wax or sealer(alway protect after you clean) Polishes are designed to produce a shine in the paint surface. It does this my removing the top layer of paint, also light oxidation & light scratches/swirls. Polishing by hand can have very little effect. Apply it as you would wax except buffing off before it dries. When working by hand I dont do the circular motion, staight back and forth to reduce any swirling. Glaze fills imperfections/micro scratches Compound is highly abrasive to remove heavy oxidation/scratches. Wax is to protect, may only last 30-60days. Carnauba wax! Sealant is polymer & last longer than normal wax. 4-6months Car dealer sell this stuff on new car for $500 or more. My cost to apply the same product is $3-5.00 per car/truck. By far the best reults will come from a multi step process done with a high speed polisher. These give major swirls in the wrong hands. Random orbit buffers will give decent results with 50% less work time than by hand & no swirls! S-Spy 06-27-2003, 01:34 AM Wow jackasssi, thank you very much for this, it was real informative. :smile: J_Swigz 06-28-2003, 05:47 PM Originally posted by jackasssi 1. Quick rinse 2. Spray chemicals, scrub, rinse. bugs, wheels, tar, tires wheels wells, etc. 3. Wash main body with car wash shampoo 4. Dry with a chamois, all crack, door & trunk jambs, gas filler door, etc. 5. Clay bar to remove contaminants(clay bar=cleaner) 6. Polish 7. Glaze 8. Wax or sealer(alway protect after you clean) W3rd yo, that's how we do things where I work. I agree completely with teh no direct sunlight. We had a guy bring his car by because he couldnt get the wax off and it turned out, he had waxed it in his driveway, went in and taken a nap while it sat in the sun, and then tried some poor excuse for a towel to get it off. People amaze me sometimes:bloated: BullShifter 06-28-2003, 05:57 PM We had a guy bring his car by because he couldnt get the wax off and it turned out, he had waxed it in his driveway, went in and taken a nap while it sat in the sun, and then tried some poor excuse for a towel to get it off. People amaze me sometimes :iceslolan BullShifter 06-28-2003, 06:08 PM If you were to clean the interior also, do that before any exterior work. You dont want wet seats & carpet. Remove all the junk from the inside 1. vacuum - dust brushes & crevice tools do wonders 2. clean headliner if vinyl(be very careful cleaning cloth headliners) 3. clean interior plastics/vinyl 4. clean seats (leather/vinyl) 5. shampoo carpets, mats, seats 6. clean int. windows (clean 2 or 3 times) 7. dress int. panels/vinyl (try not to get on freshly cleaned windows) 8. condition leather seats Dont let any cleaners on the plastic guage cluster cover or radio display window // any clear plastic -- use plastic cleaner & polish for that. Related Links Enter the largest automotive community on the planet! |