mgm2003
New member
A neighbor and I detailed his fathers 93 Chevy Blazer over the weekend. It's been a solid 5 years since ANYTHING has been touched inside or out. I digress....
Back on topic: (I hate to air mistakes!!!!)
The wheels/tires were so gunked up with brake dust and baked on road goo, that we decided to use a 50/50 solution of simple green & water. This cleaned the tires/rims (3 passes), but produced a milky white haze on the rims. Almost looked like patches of the clear on the wheels were starting to go bad. I suspect part of this was caused by letting the simple green soak on the rims for 3-4 minutes because the hazing showed up a lot more in spots where the simple green started to dry. Is there anything that I can try to correct or improve this?
Back on topic: (I hate to air mistakes!!!!)
The wheels/tires were so gunked up with brake dust and baked on road goo, that we decided to use a 50/50 solution of simple green & water. This cleaned the tires/rims (3 passes), but produced a milky white haze on the rims. Almost looked like patches of the clear on the wheels were starting to go bad. I suspect part of this was caused by letting the simple green soak on the rims for 3-4 minutes because the hazing showed up a lot more in spots where the simple green started to dry. Is there anything that I can try to correct or improve this?