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Drying a car
After washing your car what is the best way you have found to dry it. Towels always leave streaks for me.
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The absorber works wonders! It's bout 10 bucks, lasts forever, and does not streak!
http://www.absorber.com/ I use towels on the bottom of the car so I don't get the absorber dirty. If you want wax, I really like Mothers carnuba cleaner wax paste, its great! If you want to spend some time, they also have a 3 step liquid wax system (cleaner, seal and glaze, wax), its amazingly good, but takes a lot of time, like waxing your car 3 times. I applied it to my 72 Challenger, the is car garaged and covered, driven on some nice summer days, and the wax is still on there after a year and a half! Just take the cover off, wipe off the dust, and your good to go! |
i always just try and find a dry towel and use that, always seemed to do a fine job to me:D
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I have to admit, that absorber thing is nice... it's very strange feeling but it does a good job...I have one... it works well for me...
-as |
honest to goodness? I do 80+ on the highway! HAHA
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i use the squeegie thing, then just touch it up with regular bathroom towels. if you get most of the water off with the squeegie it works great.
i might have to try that absorber thing |
I would definitley use the Absorber, I own one and it is amazing how well it dries. You can get those at Auto Zone
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This is only my opinion but I would never use the Absorber on my stang. I use it on my daily driver and I don't like how it 'grips' the paint. If there are any contaminents in or on your paint, the Absorber will just drag them across it. Also, it doesn't have any nap so there is no where for contaminents to go. They just get pushed around the surface. Don't get me wrong, it works great on my daily driver because I don't have to worry about scratches and I just want to get it washed and dried asap but I would never use it on my Mustang. With that being said, this is what I do to dry my car.
After I'm done washing, I always take the nozzle off the hose and let the water sheet off the car. You can continue 'feeding' the sheet at it moves down the car. This will get almost all the water off without even touching the paint. To get what's left, I use a 100% cotton bath towel and blot the paint. After blotting with the 100% cotton towel, I swipe over the paint with a microfiber towel. Using this method, I'm only rubbing the paint once per panel which results in no scratches or micro-marring plus the microfiber towel is alot softer than any cotton or terry towel. Check it out if you want more details. THIS PROCESS WORKS GREAT! No more scratches or swirls after you're done washing. http://www.autopia.org/forums/showth...?threadid=5120 |
im sure glad i dont own a black car......darn black paint shows every dam swirl
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With the absorber, if you wash your car right, you won't have and piece of dirt on your car. I am not saying that you don't wash your car right. I have had a black mustang and I used it all the time and there was never a scratch on it. I work in a body shop and the porter/detailer uses the Absorber. That shows our trust in it if we use it on fresh paint. Just keep the Absorber clean and make sure all dirt is off the car and you will be just fine
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Anyone have experience with Mothers clay bar system? |
I just don't like the fact that it 'grabs' the paint and it doesn't have any nap. I'd use the absorber to blot the paint but never to rub it across. Just my opinion and what has worked and what hasn't worked for me thus far.
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I was going to use the clay bar for the first time yesturday but it got to cold and rainy so I will do it this weekend. HOpe it works.
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I use the Mother's Clay Bar system. It is freaking awesome. I love it you can totally FEEL the difference when your done with it. I dry my car with the California water blade and a good clean towel. Definitely recommend the clay bar.
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C'mon guys-
You can wash your car right and still have dirt on it. You can wash your car by hand from new 3x a week, and in a few months you'll have contaminents embedded in the paint. The claybars reveals that. I think that the best technique is the sheeting method- gets almost all of the water off of the paint before you touch it. But I still wouldn't own another black car... ;) Still reminds me of a funny story- My neighbor just bought a new Camaro Z28 in '95 and was late for our 4th of July party at the hangout, and the car had a light dust on it, and he wanted to rinse it off before leaving. Well, he laid the wash mitt over it and just lightly waved it over the car to loosen the dirt up, to rinse it off. Would have worked okay, except he thought that he didn't need any soap... Omigod- you should see the scratches he had on the 3 day old turd... HA! |
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