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SheldonH
05-13-2012, 09:07 PM
Just thought i wold start a topic to see what some of you guys use as tools for detailing that our not made for detailing.

Mine our as follows
Cheap foam sponges from the dollar store=tire dressing applicators
Toothbrush=good small scrubber
Bissel little green machine=a respectable carpet shampooer
Compressed air for computer=Make a make shift tornado gun
Windex glass cleaning rag=A microfiber on one side and a drying one on the back

These are just some, post some of yours on here and help forum members save some cash on some useful alternatives.

RhetoricMixes
05-13-2012, 09:12 PM
I use toothbrushes to get dirt out of small crevices. I also use small paint brushes with soft bristles to clean the creases in seat seams. Paint brushes are also very good at agitating any cleaner you let dwell while detailing engine bays.

SON1C
05-13-2012, 09:14 PM
lowes has mf applicators for about $1.25 a sponge (the small rectangle mf sponge applicators)

not a non detailing the the small carrand brush for interior detailing its short its like $2.50, very cheap, but works great and doesn't really lose its bristles, atleast so far, some of the carrand brushes lose a ton of bristles on every use aka junk

cotton swabs

opie_7afe
05-13-2012, 09:34 PM
stipple brushes made for arts and crafts = swissvax style brush...ethnic hair brush or a natural bristle nail brush for leather/vinyl/hard plastics

Agfan
05-13-2012, 09:46 PM
Might be a bit old school but here goes.
Green scrub pads for interior
Wd-40 for wheels
Distilled water for washing cars
Tide bleach stick for white walls on tires.

I'm not giving all my secrets out but there's a few. Lol

Jomax
05-13-2012, 09:53 PM
Mr clean eraser


Sent from my iPhone using AG Online

Dr Oldz
05-13-2012, 09:57 PM
Beer cooler! :D

andrew b
05-14-2012, 08:17 AM
Swiffer duster, the original. Use it to remove light brake dust that's accumulated but never gotten wet.

Klasse Act
05-14-2012, 08:34 AM
I've been to Ikea a couple times and have bought these dusters that work AWESOME on cleaning the insides of the wheels. The duster part is very long as well as the handle, this way you get all the way in there after letting the wheel cleaner break things down for a bit. Once your done, rinse off with low pressure water and let dry on the ground standing it up, this way the weight doesn't pull down the duster and make it come off. Once its dry, just twist the handle and it fluffs itself out and its ready for cleaning next time.

The pink eraser, great for getting wax out of pourous areas and/or rubber, just erase like you would normally and it gets in there and goes away, follow up with your favorite dressing to make it look new again, BAM!

I know most people know about this but there's always someone who hasn't, so use WD40 to remove that grease/tar you sometimes pick up from the road, comes off SOOOOOOOO easy and doesn't hurt the finish (after cleaning, hit the area with some quick detailer anyways)

Armor All (noone uses it for automotive uses anymore, right!) This stuff does the trick when you want to make the wheelwells look shiney on your car or more importantly, your truck! It may not last the longest but its cheap and does the trick in there.

Great topic OP!

gatoman39
05-14-2012, 09:20 AM
Qtips for applying dressing to rubber trim around windows and mirrors. Small cotton rounds used for cosmetics (saturate with waterless wash)to spot treat bird dropping and those little yellow spots that I've been told are insect droppings.

dwlinc23
05-14-2012, 09:31 AM
- brush for dentures
- Mr. Clean Magic Sponge
- Q-tips
- foam paint brushes

BuckeyeR/T
05-14-2012, 09:48 AM
Peanut butter and a tooth brush for getting wax off of textured black trim

Frenchie
05-14-2012, 09:59 AM
Foam applicators in the paint section at Wal Mart. They are 1.50 for a 12 pack of different sizes. They hare a little foam applicator on the tip of a small wooden stick. The pack comes with ones that range from 1/2" to 2" wide. They are the best thing I have used to apply dressing on all surfaces. Especially side mirrors, and also to apply interior protectant along the dash on it's curved surfaces.

feds27
05-14-2012, 10:33 AM
From the super market: Sprayway glass cleaner, Dawn dish soap, distilled white vinegar, ziplock bags.

From HD: small garden pump sprayer, 3m tape, nitrile gloves

Other: Corrosion-X, blue shop towels, soft cooler for carrying products.

Railroad
05-14-2012, 10:41 AM
I've replaced Dawn with Ultra Gain, has on the bottle that it's a hand soap and a dishwashing liquid. It does better on washing dishes and it's
a buck cheaper at Dollar General where I'm at.