I keep "joking" we should look into Prozac brownies for the lobby of our repair shop.
"Here, have a brownie. Now, about your X3..."
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Only disadvantage is it wont do the wheels/wheel wells, tires and undercarriage like the old pressure washer.
Lately I've rinseless washed some pretty dirty wheels (nothing like caked on black brake dust though) and tires with McKee's Tire and Rubber Rejuvenator and McKee's N-914 (at 1:32). So far they've all come out great, but they were not fancy and expensive wheels - just stock wheels on daily drivers. On higher-dollar wheels I still do a rinseless wash if they're not filthy. So far all is working well, but using something like Meguiar's D143, soap and running water is still very effective. I concede that rinseless washing, from my experience so far, does not do a great job at cleaning the wheel barrels or the wheel well liner.
Fightnews, your first RW product is a VERY good one that I actually tried about a couple monthes ago as a sample, really impressive! I assume you too had a sample if your looking for your next one and I guess it depends upon your needs but here's a few that you just can't go wrong with, in no particular order:
-CarPro Ech2o
-McKee's N914
-Wolfgang Uber
All can be made up as a RW or WW that will most definitely impress you! If your looking to make a great clay lube, once again, can't go wrong with any of them but because N914 leaves nothing behind I would stick with the 1st or 3rd one for that.
Crazy, I just made a post about converting to RW's!