ONR at the coin-op - a disappointment in the first go round

Lightman said:
That's funny. One time that happened to me and the only door I could manage to get open was the back, and had to crawl up to the drivers seat thru the back of my tahoe..haha

How do you see out enough to drive when it is that cold and frozen?
 
what I do in the winter is use a 32oz spray bottle..mix 3 oz of shampoo rest water...I spray the truck down with the soap.....let sit a minute...and rinse with rinse water at the car wash...it comes 95% clean...when winter weather is mild I take a bucket loaded with soap and water with a cover in it..in the bed of the truck and go at night when no crowds and do a hand wash....I go more for salt removal ..the grime will not eat the truck..the salt will....



Al
 
The soap at the coin-op may be harsh, but I've used it on my vehicles for over forty years. I would much rather use the coin-op soap for the really heavy crud than move it around with a mitt or brush. (By the way when I handwash my trucks at home and they have heavy crud on them I really like the Meguiars brushes.)



If you can apply wax every four-six weeks there should be no problem. In the winter I use a "quickie" cleaner/wax like Meguiars Cleaner/Wax in the burgandy bottle or Meguiars ColorX. Besides that, today's car finishes can handle a few weeks without a good coat of wax.



Winter is a b----. Just do the best you can to keep your vehicle lookin' sort of good.



By the way, you have never lived until you lift of a piece of paint or decal at the coin-op. It's an "Oh Shi--!" experience if there ever was one. :D



Tom :cool:
 
Do you guys use the ONR to clean wheels,tires,fenderwells and such? Do you recommend a different bucket of solution for this?
 
I do the pump sprayer with ONR and some car soap...I have not yet had an issue with a grime layer hanging on after the clean rinse...but this is the first truck I've ever had such a kept-up layer of LSP, also. I will never again use the coin-op soap or pre-rinse. It's too harsh and I no longer see the need...and it only takes 4 quarters worth of clean water to do what I need done, even on my big truck. I even gave up on the spot free rinse since I can be home in 5 minutes to do the drydown. Maybe in below freezing weather I'll change my mind.



I always come straight home and follow up with a QD strength ONR wipedown/drydown as well.
 
In the winter I just go and use buckets with regular soap a wash mit. Just make sure that you go at really odd times or else you are taking up a stall aka taking away from the car wash owners business.



For my wheels I just use a some wheel cleaner and the cheap brush that they have here. But note that i have crappy steelies on my car for the winter.
 
Do you guys use the ONR to clean wheels,tires,fenderwells and such? Do you recommend a different bucket of solution for this?

Yes, ONR works surprisingly well on wheels/tires/fenderwells. I do these last with the same spray/rinse bucket method.
 
tguil said:
The soap at the coin-op may be harsh, but I've used it on my vehicles for over forty years. I would much rather use the coin-op soap for the really heavy crud than move it around with a mitt or brush.

Yor statement suggests you having tried Optimum No Rinse....but that's what's great about ONR - the lubricants and surfactants make this a non issue - this lubrication is how I can wipe dirt off with an MF towel without scratching. The pass with the soft brush is no different than the pass with the wet MF or wash mitt.
 
Frugle said:
How do you see out enough to drive when it is that cold and frozen?

I see you're from Georgia. Well, it's the opposite of air conditioning called heater/defroster - we blow warm air on the windshield. For the rear, we often have a defogger - a wire like heating coil in the glass. (LOL-couldn't resist.)
 
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