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Regular Member
Best winter washing method
Hi guys, first post here and also will soon be my first full winter with a car whose paint I actually care about.
I live in Michigan so winters can be cold, snowy, and salty. I also don’t have access to a heated garage or warm space to wash the car. The garden hose also gets put away for the winter. I usually use the two bucket method when it’s warm enough outside, but won’t be able to do that come winter.
Here’s my thought…
Prep stage:
1. Fill a pump sprayer with hot tap water and some ONR.
2. Fill two buckets, one with my usual Meg’s Gold Class and hot water and the other with just hot water.
Wash stage
3. Pre-soak a panel or two at a time with the pump sprayer
4. Wash the panel with 2 bucket method
5. Dry the freshly washed panels
I wont be able to pre-rinse, only pre-soak since no garden hose. My thought is that ONR in the pump sprayer won’t get too foamy and will add some lubricity. Hot water used throughout the process so it doesn’t freeze onto the car before I get a chance to dry it.
Any input from you veterans? Thanks!
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Re: Best winter washing method
ONR is the product to use but you don’t need to go to that length or complexity. Mix up Onr in one bucket, get four or five towels in that bucket, pull out a completely sopping wet soaked towel and do two panels then discarded in another bucket. Get a fresh towel out of the bucket and do two more panels, then discard …after you move around the car in this fashion, use a waffle weave towel to dry a car. This is known as a true rinseless wash. The beauty of this technique is since you’re only pulling towels that are completely clean out of the solution, the solution stays virgin it doesn’t transfer dirt back to your car. After you’re done, take all the towels and wash them. And since the towels are completely sopping wet, dirt doesn’t scratch your car.
If the car is completely filthy with road grime salt snow etc. run it through a touchless wash first then come home and do a rinseless.
Search on YouTube for the Gary Dean rinseless wash method, he’s made several videos on this.
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Super Member
Best winter washing method
Originally Posted by BlackCarBlues
Hi guys, first post here and also will soon be my first full winter with a car whose paint I actually care about.
I live in Michigan so winters can be cold, snowy, and salty. I also don’t have access to a heated garage or warm space to wash the car. The garden hose also gets put away for the winter. I usually use the two bucket method when it’s warm enough outside, but won’t be able to do that come winter.
Here’s my thought…
Prep stage:
1. Fill a pump sprayer with hot tap water and some ONR.
2. Fill two buckets, one with my usual Meg’s Gold Class and hot water and the other with just hot water.
Wash stage
3. Pre-soak a panel or two at a time with the pump sprayer
4. Wash the panel with 2 bucket method
5. Dry the freshly washed panels
I wont be able to pre-rinse, only pre-soak since no garden hose. My thought is that ONR in the pump sprayer won’t get too foamy and will add some lubricity. Hot water used throughout the process so it doesn’t freeze onto the car before I get a chance to dry it.
Any input from you veterans? Thanks!
How are you gonna get the gold class off with no hose?
Also agree with above but would use your presoak. Spray 2 panels at a time. Let dwell for couple minutes then rinseless.
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Super Member
Re: Best winter washing method
Another suggestion: All of our outdoor hoses are put away for winter. Leave the crud on the vehicle until it gets above freezing, use a portable pressure washer that has a built in tank (Sunjoe makes one that is battery operated); rinse off vehicle to remove as much junk as possible then proceed to wash and use pressure washer along the way.
2022 Carrera S & Honda CRV Hybrid
2015 Lexus IS 350, 2016 Ford F-150
Cobalt 242 (8.1 L block, Volvo outdrive)
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Regular Member
Re: Best winter washing method
I too live in Michigan, Go Blue. I do the spray bay to rinse the salt off as much as possible. Then put it in garage to warm up and do a rinse less wash with lots of microfibers. I am considering the Dewalt cordless pressure washer and just doing the rinse at the house where it is warmer
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Super Member
Re: Best winter washing method
I have ONR/GG RW mixed up at the QD ration in a spray bottle I use as a pre-treat. I then do as others suggested and soak a few towels in the ONR bucket and do one panel at a time.
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Super Member
Re: Best winter washing method
Glen e i like the idea of the method you suggested. What towels do you use? Im guessing something with a thicker gsm...like 500gsm +?
Never did hand washes in the Pa winters unless it got warm enough.
Im curious as to other folks methods as well.
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Regular Member
Re: Best winter washing method
Spray bay here as well, utilizing a bottle of water/soap mixture instead of the bay's own for presoak. Rinse, head home (hopefully not too salty), and rinseless wash / waterless wash depending on road conditions.
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Super Member
Re: Best winter washing method
For dusting. I use ONR with one fluffy 16” x 16” folded twice. After each panel the towel is redipped in ONR and refolded exposing a fresh surface. A towel gives 8 surfaces when refolded.
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Regular Member
Re: Best winter washing method
Thank you all for the suggestions! I think I will do something along the lines of:
1. Pre-soak with pump sprayer using hot water and ONR (pressure washer is on the list of wants, but not needs at the moment)
2. Rinseless hot water ONR wash with several MF towels (any recommendations for rinseless wash MF towels?)
3. Dry with drying towel (recently purchased CarPro DHydrate)
@glen e: I thought touches car washes were bad because they all use non-pH neutral or otherwise way too harsh of soap?
@coatingsarecrack: I was tired last night when writing the post and didn't realize I didn't include a way to get the Gold Class suds off haha.
@ct18/Ace22: I like the idea of using the local quarter car wash for pre-soak/first rinse for when it's above freezing, but worried all the water I spray on the car will turn to ice on the way home when below freezing
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