Pretreating Panels Prior to ONR

dschribs

New member
I`m going to start washing my cars using ONR in the Winter. I`ve been watching lots of vids and reading up on here so I think I`m good to go on the ONR methods and procedures.

Quick question - I`m thinking I may need to pre-treat some panels that have some heavier dirt, bugs, tar, grime on them prior to ONR`ing the panel.

Is it ok to do this w an ONR wash?

If so, I was thinking Megs D108. Would that be ok in this situation?
 
I usually mix some ONR(or whatever rinseless wash im using) at QD strength and spray the car down with it first. If you`ve got some really dirty spots, you can spot treat with some APC. Works well enough for me.
 
I normally mix two gallons of ONR solution in a bucket and then fill a quart-sized sprayer 3/4 in the bucket. That gives me enough spray capacity to pre-treat the entire car.
 
If a car is really dirty; I will pull out the hose and rinse it off first. I find that sometimes that is simply necessary with winter crud that is caked on.


I almost alway make 1 gal of product then dump some of it into my pressure sprayer that allows me to pretreat the entire car either all at once or a few panels at a time. I also use the multi towel technique so I always am using fresh clean product.
 
If a car is really dirty; I will pull out the hose and rinse it off first. I find that sometimes that is simply necessary with winter crud that is caked on.
Unfortunately some think this is a sin given it is a rinseless wash but makes sense. The goal is to clean the car in the safest way as possible and not to follow some hard and fast routine.
 
I always pre-treat with wash dilution mixture out of a pump/garden sprayer. If there are bugs and/or heavier contaminants I`ve used stuff like Bugsquash,APC,Carpro Trix and Tarminator in combination with my Rinseless wash just like I would during a regular water and soap wash.
 
Some APC`s I`ve used are difficult to rinse off the paint and have left a residue. Even cleaning the trim with APC`s I have to concentrate on cleaning the paint around the trim thoroughly so I don`t leave behind residue.

Try using a bug remover. I used Wolfgang Bug Remover Spritz for the first time this weekend and it worked great. It clings to the paint well, so it`s perfect for the lower panels and dissolves all of that adhesive stuff like bugs and tar on the lower panels. Rinses well too. On the Pontiac and Nissan this weekend I used WG Bug Remover Spritz on the front as a pre-soak, then the Montana Boars Hair Car Wash Brush took care of the rest.

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In the winter I have the availability of a warm building every Saturday AM to rinseless wash my DD. I`ll mix up some RW solution in a 48 oz. pump sprayer, spray the car down and let it soak while I`m filling my wash. What`s left in the sprayer gets used to rinse the wheels and tires. I have a black GM car and it`s worked OK for me the past few winters. I use Meguiar`s MF mitts, typically one for the upper half and one for the lowers. I`m often tempted to try out a stack of pre-soaked MF towels, ala Gary Dean, but the MF mitts seem to release dirt so easily with just a few hearty shakes in the bucket.

Bill
 
Ill use the coin op car wash to rinse it off and if its above 35 ill drive home and wash it in the driveway, if not ill bring a bucket with a lid and bang it out in their wash bay.
 
todd mentioned in the past that dp bug remover was RW friendly, perhaps the mckees one is too...i like bug squash 1;5 for RW presoak on bugs. 1:3 if really bad bugs

like others i make the qd solution of rw and soak with garden sprayer, sometimes even after a hose down

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