Maintenance and Upkeep Discussion HHR maintenance tips ranging from oil change intervals to brake pads and everything in between.

Washing Your HHR

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 11-13-2008, 10:59 AM
  #51  
Senior Member
 
twistrman's Avatar
 
Join Date: 06-19-2008
Location: Indiana
Posts: 1,454
i got a sponge from the auto store that i use for washing that has a super soft side and then the other side looks king of like a nylon web, kind of hard to describe, but it does such a good job at getting the bugs off, a little soap and water to lube it and a little rubbing and they come off.

If you can avoid drying your car with a leaf blower, do it. Dry your car off other ways. I'm not a big eco freak, but i try to help out by recycling and everything, but using a leaf blower is just lazy and stupid. Put a little elbow grease in to it. I know a lot of people really could care less, but still...

"A 2000 report by the California EPA determined that the average residential leaf blower produces 145 times more hydrocarbons, 7.5 times more carbon monoxide, and 11 times more particulate matter in one hour than a 1999-2000 light duty vehicle driven at 30 mph, getting 15 miles to the gallon. The hydrocarbon emissions produced from one-half hour of residential leaf blower operation are equal to the emissions produced from driving 2200 miles, comparable to a round trip from Denver to San Diego. Commercial leaf blowers with more horse power are even more polluting."
twistrman is offline  
Old 11-13-2008, 12:53 PM
  #52  
Senior Member
 
halfpanel08's Avatar
 
Join Date: 06-01-2008
Location: arlington texas
Posts: 2,762
Originally Posted by daniagm
You ever drain the air compressor and see some of the stuff coming out with the air?. Stick with an electric blower if you have one. To much contamination comes out of an air compressor don't chance the damage to your paint
I use to work at a shop where cars were detailed and all we used was air and sometimes a shammi. This is the method we always used , and most cars we had in there were worth over 100k $ .. so i dont think its necc a bad way to do it if they let us do it on phantoms and lp460s all day long.
halfpanel08 is offline  
Old 11-13-2008, 03:09 PM
  #53  
Member
 
Gol10dr's Avatar
 
Join Date: 05-17-2007
Location: Orlando, Fl
Posts: 32
Here's some things I've used on mine and are impressed with.

I use Detailer's Pride car wash shampoo, which is mail order.
For a good over the counter, I would use Meguiar's gold class

For Bugs and Tar, A wet Dryer sheet will work wonders.

After the wash I use my electric leaf blower to dry off, then a synthetic chamois.

I use a clay bar about once ever 3 months, For a shine..

Right now I switch back and forth from Poorboys Polish with Sealant and Detailer's pride sealant with Poor Boy's "Blue" wax over top that.

I really don't use too much over the counter stuff anymore, but for a sealant.. NXT or Liquid Glass always worked for me.
Gol10dr is offline  
Old 03-22-2010, 04:11 PM
  #54  
Member
 
doogal123's Avatar
 
Join Date: 11-09-2009
Location: Huntington Beach CA
Posts: 38
Adam's car shampoo works well on my black finish - neutral pH (7.0), easy on the finish, lots of suds if you want them...
doogal123 is offline  
Old 03-22-2010, 11:21 PM
  #55  
New Member
 
chuchuchip's Avatar
 
Join Date: 02-25-2010
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 27
RainX works great until it starts to wear. It destroys wiper rubber quick, you will change the wipers often. I use it once on a windshield, never again. However, I do use it on the sunroof, side, & back glass. When it's time to renew the RainX, the water spots won't "fly off" easily, I can live with that on the sides until I redo the windows. With the heavy rain in NY lately, I've no need to turn on the rear wiper because of the RainX! Since no one carries wiper refills anymore, I can adapt the wiper rubber refill from past cars that I still have to the back wiper.
chuchuchip is offline  
Old 03-23-2010, 01:21 AM
  #56  
Platinum Member
 
sleeper's Avatar
 
Join Date: 01-09-2007
Location: SE USA
Posts: 15,889
My Air Compressor has 2 filters I've installed, so it blows clean & being 220 is eco friendly as well.

And all my glass except the windshield gets waxed...
sleeper is offline  
Old 04-20-2010, 05:21 PM
  #57  
 
Deputy Donkey's Avatar
 
Join Date: 04-17-2010
Location: Norfolk, Va, USA
Posts: 9
What do you use for the windows? I've always used a black and white newspaper or wad of ones and some windex with no problem. But I got some nasty streaks today, so I guess the old trick isn't as good as it used to be.
Deputy Donkey is offline  
Old 04-20-2010, 07:00 PM
  #58  
Senior Member
 
saxrocks2009's Avatar
 
Join Date: 06-20-2009
Location: Howell Michigan
Posts: 1,392
Originally Posted by Rikki Sixx
Try wet dryer sheets. They work like a charm on love bugs here in FLA.
I agree 100%. Dryer sheets work awesome to get the bugs off. I used them on the front of fifth wheel that when thru a love bug cloud down south somewhere.. It takes no effort and you will be surprised on what it takes off
saxrocks2009 is offline  
Old 06-18-2010, 03:35 PM
  #59  
Member
 
doogal123's Avatar
 
Join Date: 11-09-2009
Location: Huntington Beach CA
Posts: 38
Originally Posted by Deputy Donkey
What do you use for the windows? I've always used a black and white newspaper or wad of ones and some windex with no problem. But I got some nasty streaks today, so I guess the old trick isn't as good as it used to be.
Try using a microfiber window cloth with the Windex. Something about the microfiber helps clean the gunk off.

If you really want to get a great window cleaner, get the Adam's Glass Cleaner at adamspolishes.com It really removes the junk on the windows and doesn't streak. Works great on the house windows, too., and I like my windows and mirrors clean and streak free.

The other thing you can do to get them super clean is to clabar the windows, just like you would do your paint. It makes the windows extremely smooth. Then clean the windows and presto - sparkling glass. :)
doogal123 is offline  
Old 06-18-2010, 06:45 PM
  #60  
Senior Member
 
1970judge's Avatar
 
Join Date: 07-12-2007
Location: Republic of Texas
Posts: 690
I use microfiber with 50/50 megs concentrate to clean with.

To get rid of spots I use a terry cloth with M04.
1970judge is offline  


Quick Reply: Washing Your HHR



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:40 AM.