Cleaning vehicles in cold, cold weather?

Asad_A203

New member
Hello Everyone,



I am a first time poster and I have a quick question for you guys. I would like to take care of my car properly, but I live in a city known as Winnipeg, where right now the weather is supposed to be dipping and staying below -14C for the rest of december on average... I tried washing my car two days ago when it was -10C, and the ONR formed sheets of ice on my car in seconds of me applying it. I tried beating the ice formation, but my waffleweave towel froze onto my car and I decided to give in...



Now I know using the local bay carwash in a horrible thought on a car paint, but do I have any other options available to me? The signs in the carwash I go to strictly say no bucket washing, and since the bays are always full (no matter what time it seems), I am never able to spend the proper time to clean my car. Do you guys have any method for cleaning cars in cold weather, my garage is insulated but not heated.



Also given the weather conditions, would it be too late to apply a coating of Klaise on the vehicle and top it with Meguiars Wax? Or would that not work in below 0 temperatures as well.
 
i dont really know what you as far as the cold because i live in Texas, lol.



but if your garage is insulated then maybe you can invest in a couple of halogens and try your ONR in there

the halos pretty much act as heaters and you can see a ton of imperfections under them, its like getting 2 birds with 1 stone
 
thanks dude will try that out, I also have a space heater.



Well to give you a hint of how cold it is, last night I came home, parked in the garage, and thought I would apply some Lexol (just recieved it the other day). So i got a wet sponge and came back to my car, and during the middle of the application I realised the sponge froze! I hate to see how hard it will be to do anything come January...
 
I live in Wisconsin, so I feel your pain. I use a torpedo heater that runs off a 20# propane tank. Bring the car in the garage, leaving the door cracked 1 to 2 inches. Turn your heater on and let it run for 15 to 30 minutes depending how cold it is. That should warm the air and the surface of the car. Good to go with ONR and can also apply pretty much any product you want. It is somewhat time consuming, but well worth it. Enjoy the cold, I certainly won't. Make sure to read and follow the instructions of any heater you use, it can be very dangerous with fumes and any flames.
 
insulated garage (and garage door) with gas heater hooked into house gas line FTW!!! :)



i'm also in WI, but just heat up my garage when needed to do washes/details. if i didn't have the warm garage, i would stick to using the self-wash bays and merely spray the majority of the salt/dirt off the car in the winter. definitely make sure you rinse under the car every week or so during the road salt season.



.02
 
Are you using at least warm water in your ONR mixture? I've been doing this at -15 temps and have had no problems in the garage.
 
Paradigm, very nice with the gas heater. I was thinking of getting a Modine Hot Dawg gas heater. Just not sure i want the expense of running gas line out to garage and venting. It would be great, especially on days like today, wind, snow and rain. Great day to put some more layers of wax on.
 
Winnipeg is much colder than Wisconsin or Michigan. If it's much below 25F I'd suggest using a touchless car wash, then go straight home and park inside and hope your windows and doors don't freeze.
 
itb76 said:
Winnipeg is much colder than Wisconsin or Michigan. If it's much below 25F I'd suggest using a touchless car wash, then go straight home and park inside and hope your windows and doors don't freeze.



That's pretty much what I'm doing all winter. I'm in Anchorage, which isn't even the cold part of Alaska. I hit the touchless wash, try not to freeze my hands off while wiping down the door jambs and cross my fingers, as I park outside 24/7.



Good luck. (I did an outdoors ONR wash with warm water at about 40 degrees one lucky day in early November, but that or 35 is probably my limit.)
 
40 degrees needs warm water?



i just washed a car in 35 degree weather, and i barely ever encounter weather that cold!
 
JBs said:
40 degrees needs warm water?



i just washed a car in 35 degree weather, and i barely ever encounter weather that cold!



It may not "need" warm water at 40 degrees, but it sure made it more comfortable.



I'm not messing with trying to wash the car when it's in the 30s because chances are my car will be colder than the air. It's cold at night, we don't get much daylight this time of year, and where I park is largely in the shade for most of the day. A cold day in LA doesn't compare in my book. :laugh:
 
I would put the ONR in a warm bucket of water. Then use some kind of mitten or glove covered with a rubber glove so you don't get your hands wet and cold. I do this during the winter and it works really good.



For your garage, you can get a small Reddy Heater and use your grill propane tank with it. This will get your garage warm enough to use the ONR.
 
kaval said:
Are there any chemical properties of ONR that would make it more resistant to freezing?



I can't answer that question specifically but can share an experience that speaks to its properties. I haven't tried to do a full blown ONR wash below freezing, but I have tried to use the ONR in its quick detail strength to help me remove a nasty bird bomb. It was probably about 20 degrees Farenheit that day. I'm sorry to say the ONR as a QD froze pretty darn quickly. I was able to remove the bird bomb, but I had a frozen water mark from the frozen ONR until my next full wash.
 
'
kaval said:
Are you using at least warm water in your ONR mixture? I\'ve been doing this at -15 temps and have had no problems in the garage.
\r\n\r\nSure have but the mixture turned freezing cold after 10 minutes. That is about the same time it started to freeze up.'
 
'
itb76 said:
Winnipeg is much colder than Wisconsin or Michigan. If it\'s much below 25F I\'d suggest using a touchless car wash, then go straight home and park inside and hope your windows and doors don\'t freeze.
\r\n\r\n In winnipeg we haven\'t had a day above -15C this whole week, my car registers -4F (american car) when I start it up in the garage, so it is quite a bit about freezing. I think I will just need to use the touchless, if I find some time i will try with a heater and see how it works. Chris from eshine said ONR is only effective up until around -5C without needing a heated garage, so I think unless I get heat running in my garage (massive amounts), I will need to just use the car wash.'
 
UpNorth said:
I hit the touchless wash, try not to freeze my hands off while wiping down the door jambs and cross my fingers, as I park outside 24/7...

So did I, until about a month ago I put my racecar into a rented storage unit so I can park inside. Why didn't I do that five years ago? :confused:



kaval said:
Are there any chemical properties of ONR that would make it more resistant to freezing?

No, the only advantage to ONR as far as freezing goes, is you use a lot less water. It doesn't get deep into your windows and doors to freeze them. But the car surface still has to be above freezing for a wash.
 
How do some of you guys heat the buckets of water? I want a unit or units that would heat water to 31c as quick as possible while having the gritt guard inside < optional :)

will be heating 3 buckets at the same time 1 wheels, 2 for paint
 
I feel your pain. I'm a few miles south in Bismarck, ND and its been between 0-10f and I don't have a garage. I've got my ONR in the mail should come tommorow and I don't know how the heck I'm going to use it... :( I'm going to see if I can borrow my friends garage.
 
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