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Interested to know how you get on with this, I thought about getting something similar but concluded it wouldn't give full coverage from one bottle. Ended up getting a cheap snow foam adapter for my pressure washer and it works very well.I'm getting one of these and will report back:
If it works as well as in the video, it will be a lot more convenient than taking out and hooking up the pressure washer, even if I need two bottles per car.Interested to know how you get on with this, I thought about getting something similar but concluded it wouldn't give full coverage from one bottle. Ended up getting a cheap snow foam adapter for my pressure washer and it works very well.
You mean essentially touchless?Pressure wash with soap and water twice a week.
I'm behind the curve, I guess, but I just got a bottle of ONR and tried it yesterday. Seems to have done a good job, and the convenience can't be beat. Washed the 3 right in my garage.
I ordered The Absorber. Looking forward to experiencing its namesake!Great info. I think I may get The Absorber. I went through a few old facecloths. Do you just wash The Absorber in a washing machine?
Thank you for the advice! I purchased The Rag Company Edgeless 365. They specifically note that it is for wax removal, polishing. Pretty good price at 19.95 for 10-pack. I also to "Dry Me a River" by The Rag Company. Great nameThe gauntlet is a plush, soft towel designed for drying. If you are applying a spray wax or detail spray, I would suggest something with a shorter pile, such as The Rag Company Eagle Edgeless 350 or the Edgeless 300. You could order a couple of each and then see which one you like better.
I actually also like the yellow microfiber towels that Costco sells for removing wax. The have a shorter pile too. Some people think they are not as good and cause scratching, but so far I have been happy with them. And you are not going to find microfiber towels at a better price than the Costco ones.
Wow, quite a shine on your T. BTW, the color looks great with your home.I hand wash with foam cannon, and dry with Wax as You Dry, for both cars pretty regularly. I have also used automated washes with zero detectable drawbacks. I consistently get looks and words of disbelief when I reveal the 2018’s age and mileage.
Got it today, and the thing works great—just as in the video. I'll start a new thread on it.I'm getting one of these and will report back:
Why would you use car wash mode at all in your driveway?So, dumb question. When you're washing your Tesla in your driveway, do you use Car Wash Mode? Can you use Car Wash Mode while the car is in Park? I don't want it rolling back down my driveway!
Why would you use car wash mode at all in your driveway?
Interesting points.
- Avoid 20 sentry events
- Disable walk-away lock
- Keep the charge port closed
I'm surprised you don't end up with swirl marks. From the picture, I can see you don't. (The picture isn't after a polishing, correct?)I exclusively do “waterless” washes with those “quick-wash” type spray-bottle products and a few microfiber towels. I do it maybe 4 or 5 days a week to keep it clean and shiny. If the car is really dirty (I.e. driving through a rain after a multi-week dry spell), I’ll soak one or two microfiber cloths in water to run over the car to pick up or loosen most of the heavier soiling. I take about 15 minutes per cleaning, including cleaning the wheels and shining the tires. If I’m just wiping down the body, it’s more like 5-7 minutes.
View attachment 1042437
No “buckets,” no hose, and I can knock it out in the garage before I go to work.
So does that mean you use Car Wash Mode in your driveway? And can the car be in Park? I mean, I could just try this out myself without bugging you all . . . .
- Avoid 20 sentry events
- Disable walk-away lock
- Keep the charge port closed