Nopstnz8
Member
Hey guys I am try to seek some advice for a problem I have encountered over the last month of being in school. I'm a college student living on campus and this year I finally have a car, thankfully not mine, but my moms. Well I did paint correction on it right before I got here over the summer, and got out about 80-85% of the swirls I believe. The gloss improved dramatically, but I just didn't have the time to get it to 90-95%. I park it in the parking structure across from my apartment on campus, on the 5th floor (6 floor garage with the 6th being the roof) so that I can park away from people, and try and get it covered in less pollen. I'm even parked with a wall behind me so I don't have all the crap from the mountain blowing crap on it with all the wind we get here. Anyways, when my mom said I could take her car for the first two quarters here, that I would get it looking the best I could, coat it with at least two coats of KSG, and then just do ONR washes weekly to maintain it.
BTW, it's an '06 Honda Civic in galaxy gray. So my problem is that i'm and Engineering student at Cal Poly SLO, and get a lot of work throughout the week, which means the only time I have to wash the car is on the weekends, and maybe on Wednesdays, but not always. Well I never expected it to get this dusty so fast in just a one week period where I'll drive it like one or twice that week. Our cars have always been garaged, so even having it in a covered parking garage I knew would be a pain, because I can't stand it being dusty. I would almost never let my own car get that dirty over a week period with it being garaged indoors at night.
Sadly yesterday I discovered some light swirls are now appearing under the sunlight if I look hard enough, yesterday it was pretty noticeable, although they aren't deep. When I polished it I used M205 and Menzerna 106FA which I know obvious the M205 had some filling effects, but I don't think these swirls were there before because the car is still almost as wet looking as before, just with light swirling. I know this was most likely caused by the ONR. I'm really careful using the two bucket method, changing the water in the rinse bucket out after each big section. I also make sure the Cobra microfiber sponge I use is well lubricated with the solution. I'm even using DI water to prevent water spots. I wash the car in the parking garage, first spraying it down with ONR in a pump sprayer. I've had this feeling the car may just be a little too dirty for the ONR, but it's really my only option. In the past when I ONR'd this car and it was that dirty, I didn't have problems because it wasn't polished this well, making me not really notice the effects. I'm planning to hopefully just do a one step when I get home over the break.
Well I've been reading on here that people are saying ONR has it's limits, but over the years I came to the conclusion that it sounded like those limits were much farther than what I'm dealing with. Recently I found out on here that people say hand washing is safe for a dirty car than ONR, although mine is never caked with mud or anything, just dust. Anyways, what everyone here is saying is that a foam gun is the way to go, but since I don't have access to a hose, I'm in bit of a situation.
What sucks is that we only have one Coin Op in this town, and it isn't the greatest, but I think they have a foam gun. I wanted to strictly do ONR because I didn't want to wait to use the coin op since it's usually pretty busy. I also didn't want to have water fly out of the cracks and stuff on the drive back to campus.
Basically what I'm getting at is that I would prefer to start using a foam gun and then just hand washing it each week. Do the foam guns at the Coin Ops use highly concentrated soap that would strip my sealant coats? Also, if I end up resorting to the coin op, I may just buy a Chemical Guys portable leaf blower to aid in drying.
My other idea if the foam gun method isn't an option, would be driving to the coin op and then just pressure washing down the exterior, then driving back to campus and doing an ONR wash, if I don't want to do it there. What do you guys think? Would this have any helpful effects, or do virtually nothing and cause spotting if I don't ONR right away? I'm open to reasonable suggestions, and just ordered a Chemical Guys sheepskin. Thanks for reading my long post. Lol.
BTW, it's an '06 Honda Civic in galaxy gray. So my problem is that i'm and Engineering student at Cal Poly SLO, and get a lot of work throughout the week, which means the only time I have to wash the car is on the weekends, and maybe on Wednesdays, but not always. Well I never expected it to get this dusty so fast in just a one week period where I'll drive it like one or twice that week. Our cars have always been garaged, so even having it in a covered parking garage I knew would be a pain, because I can't stand it being dusty. I would almost never let my own car get that dirty over a week period with it being garaged indoors at night.
Sadly yesterday I discovered some light swirls are now appearing under the sunlight if I look hard enough, yesterday it was pretty noticeable, although they aren't deep. When I polished it I used M205 and Menzerna 106FA which I know obvious the M205 had some filling effects, but I don't think these swirls were there before because the car is still almost as wet looking as before, just with light swirling. I know this was most likely caused by the ONR. I'm really careful using the two bucket method, changing the water in the rinse bucket out after each big section. I also make sure the Cobra microfiber sponge I use is well lubricated with the solution. I'm even using DI water to prevent water spots. I wash the car in the parking garage, first spraying it down with ONR in a pump sprayer. I've had this feeling the car may just be a little too dirty for the ONR, but it's really my only option. In the past when I ONR'd this car and it was that dirty, I didn't have problems because it wasn't polished this well, making me not really notice the effects. I'm planning to hopefully just do a one step when I get home over the break.
Well I've been reading on here that people are saying ONR has it's limits, but over the years I came to the conclusion that it sounded like those limits were much farther than what I'm dealing with. Recently I found out on here that people say hand washing is safe for a dirty car than ONR, although mine is never caked with mud or anything, just dust. Anyways, what everyone here is saying is that a foam gun is the way to go, but since I don't have access to a hose, I'm in bit of a situation.
What sucks is that we only have one Coin Op in this town, and it isn't the greatest, but I think they have a foam gun. I wanted to strictly do ONR because I didn't want to wait to use the coin op since it's usually pretty busy. I also didn't want to have water fly out of the cracks and stuff on the drive back to campus.
Basically what I'm getting at is that I would prefer to start using a foam gun and then just hand washing it each week. Do the foam guns at the Coin Ops use highly concentrated soap that would strip my sealant coats? Also, if I end up resorting to the coin op, I may just buy a Chemical Guys portable leaf blower to aid in drying.
My other idea if the foam gun method isn't an option, would be driving to the coin op and then just pressure washing down the exterior, then driving back to campus and doing an ONR wash, if I don't want to do it there. What do you guys think? Would this have any helpful effects, or do virtually nothing and cause spotting if I don't ONR right away? I'm open to reasonable suggestions, and just ordered a Chemical Guys sheepskin. Thanks for reading my long post. Lol.