Atticus808
08-20-2014, 02:43 PM
not sure if anyone does this.
The water in my area is pretty hard so it can leave water spots.
While applying Rain-X on a car I was finishing up, I noticed a bunch of water spots and didn't feel like removing the Rain-X to remove the water spots then reapply again. So I took a 3" glass polishing pad and just used that to spread the Rain-X (works great as an applicator) and put a bit of pressure where water spots are and it easily removes them.
So,
- Use a 3" glass polishing pad as a Rain-X applicator
- Removes any remaining tough water spots in the process which saves lots of time.
Just thought i'd share.
The water in my area is pretty hard so it can leave water spots.
While applying Rain-X on a car I was finishing up, I noticed a bunch of water spots and didn't feel like removing the Rain-X to remove the water spots then reapply again. So I took a 3" glass polishing pad and just used that to spread the Rain-X (works great as an applicator) and put a bit of pressure where water spots are and it easily removes them.
So,
- Use a 3" glass polishing pad as a Rain-X applicator
- Removes any remaining tough water spots in the process which saves lots of time.
Just thought i'd share.