Monday, June 18, 2018

Tips to the perfect car wash via Ian Bolderston


Ian Bolderston is a director at H20 Car Valeting till 2003. H2O opened our first site in the prestigious Mailbox shopping center in the heart of Birmingham, seizing the opportunity to provide a premium and convenient car valeting service.

A simple car wash is an easiest and most effective way to maintain your vehicle’s appearance. However, some of you might be washing your car wrong! Granted, there are a hundred ways you can wash your car these days, there is also a myriad of ways you can be doing it wrong. A few key steps can be taken when cleaning that will significantly decrease the amount of persistence it takes to maintain your vehicle’s appearance. In this write-up, we’ll talk about some tips and techniques that can help decrease undesirable whirls, scrapes, and spider-webbing that can be from poorly cleaning your car. If taken care of properly, a vehicle’s colored surface can easily last 1-2 years before demanding a full-blown improving procedure. Ian Bolderston car Valeting Company has many different products you can clean your car with over the years.




Rule 1 – The Two-Bucket Wash Method:

It is essential that you utilize two buckets when cleaning your car. Let’s think for a second on how you’re currently cleaning. I’ll bet you’re getting a single pail, filling it with soap & standard water, getting your rag, treating the car down, then going to town; constantly dunking your dirty rag into the same clean pail. All the while, you’re mixing your clean standard water that is clean with the grime and dust you just removed from the car’s area. Your clean rag/mitt becomes heavy-laden with dust, in turn shifting that dust BACK to the vehicle’s area, and gradually scratching, damaging, and dulling the painted area.


Rule 2 – Grit Guards:

Grit Guards and Washboards are relatively recent improvements to the car washing toolbox. A Grit Guard is a place that is placed into the base of your clean and washes pails that helps in getting dust contaminants from your clean glove. They allow the dust to drain to the base of the pail and provide a clean, scratch-free clean glove every time you go back to the pail for water.
A Washboard works in addition to the Resolution Secure and provides a straight surface to activate your clean glove against (note that a Grit Guard is needed in order to utilize the Washboard).




Rule 3 – The Soap:

Selecting the appropriate detergent to clean your car with is another crucial choice that will determine the work cleaning your car requires. Whatever detergent you select, make sure to never use plate detergent for cleaning your car! Dish detergent contains highly effective soaps that will not only remove the dust, oil, and dust from your vehicle’s color but also any wax security you may have used formerly.

Ian Bolderston-Instead, choose a high-quality, PH-balanced detergent that is developed particularly for cleaning colored areas. Jay Leno's Garage area Vehicle Clean is PH-neutral and is developed for optimum lubricity to avoid damaging or damaging.

Rule 4 – The Wash Mitt:
It is crucial to choose a quality clean glove. While there are thousands of types of clean safety gloves available currently available, one of the latest improvements in this area is micro-fiber chenille safety gloves. These are extra-soft safety gloves that contain absorbing lengths to help raise and snare dust away from the paint’s delicate surface area. They’re the only clean safety gloves we use at the garage!
Rule 5 – The Drying Towel:
Do not overlook the drying step. Most folks will simply grab an old, cotton bathroom towel to do the job. But fabrics like cotton are typically too aggressive to use on your car’s paint and can also leave behind dreaded swirls and scratches.
Instead, we suggest using a micro-fiber dehydrating smooth towel. These provide an extra-soft, extremely absorbing solution to aid in dehydrating your vehicle. And the best part is, they won’t damage your car’s colored areas.

The Process:
Thoroughly wash the car with your normal water hose using a powerful boost of normal water. Soak your clean glove in your clean bucket, and clean from the top of the car, then work your way down – roof, windows, bonnet, footwear, front & rear, sides, then tires, tires, and rim bore holes last (use a separate, dedicated brush to clean tires, tires and rim wells). Clean your wash glove in the rinse pail after each area, then dip in the wash pail to fill up the glove with more soapy suds. Rinse the car after each major area to help avoid detergent dehydrating on the surface area. Once each area is absolutely fresh, you can start the ultimate step, drying the car. Using very light stress, start at the top of the car, and work your way down with your dehydrating soft towel. We recommend drawing the water dry, instead of pulling the soft towel across the outer lining. Based upon on the size of your automobile, it may also be necessary to regularly band out your soft towel.





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