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| New Beetle Detailing/Cleaning Discussion area dedicated to detailing, car cleaning, polishing, and otherwise keeping your New Beetle looking good as new. |
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I don't know about you folks, but I am really sick of using drying towel/shamee things to dry off my car (if blowers aren't available). So I was really considering buying one of these: http://www.calcarduster.com/autoOrig...Waterblade.asp. What do you think? Anyone have one?
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I got one of those and used it once. Or rather tried to use it once. Our cars are too curvy. It's pretty stiff and hard to conform to the car. Plus your car has to be super super clean or you can scratch the finish.
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It's LN'z BUG rhymes with Ellen's bug The witch is back Be yourself. No one can ever tell you you're doing it wrong.-James Leo Herlihy My boy Chip | Chips garage mates Hazard switch replacement | Heater control lightbulb replacement
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Great question Scott! I was wondering the same! I'm getting tired of the old towel/shamee thing . . .
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you've gotta try the Mr. Clean AutoDry system. the soap itself eats dirt and brightens up the wax, and then you spray the car with Pur filtered water, which leaves no waterspots when it dries. i've been using it ever since i got my beetle (which, holy crap, was 3 years ago this june) and i've had no results to the contrary. never used a towel, shammy, blade, anything.
i'll never use another method. (unless i'm up here at college, in which case the DIY place has a spot-free filtered water rinse that works the same way.)
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kris. aka manoverboard987. ~ My Jetta, "Becca" ~ 2000 Bright Green GLS 2.0L
My Beetle ~ 98 Cool White 2.0L ~ Gone but not forgotten. How-To remove your "auto tranny shift plate" ~ How-To install your clear third brake light How-to Replace the A/C Controls Backlight Bulb ~ The rubbery dashboard gunk is not paint! |
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i think they recently made the regular setup cheaper, too. the differences between the regular and pro versions are that the pro has a more powerful rinse setting (for blasting bugs off and whatnot) and a quick disconnect for attaching it to the hose. i've never needed either, since the soap pretty much dissolves the bugs, and we have a separate hose nozzle thingymabobber that i hafta screw back on when i'm done (or else i get yelled at). |
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i use the blade and towels. i don't mind the xtra work. the blade (i think i have the same brand you linked to) isn't stiff, but yes, it's kinda hard to use since our cars ARE so curvy. if you go the blade route, get one on ebay - much cheaper!
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Me (Erin) ~ My car (Curby)
(o\_vw_/o) Beetles rule! There's no apostrophe before an 's' when you're talking about the plural version of a word. "I took some neat photo's!" is NOT correct. ![]() |
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The waterblade leaves fine scratches on my black car. And yes, it was perfectly clean. Brand new out of the packaging and rinsed with water before first use. They aren't really scratches but more like straight swirl marks.
I now use a microfiber drying towel. Any car care site has them. Griots Garage, Autopia, Autogeeks, etc. Get the biggest one or at least two regular sized ones. You'll dry your car in minutes! |
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I am gonna second the Mr. Clean AutoDry.
I have been using that for about two and a half years now, and works great everytime...see my photo thread on the bottom for the latest results...of course having a new car doesnt hurt the finished look either!
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I have the blade, I use it just to get the majority of water off, then I get a microfiber and get the rest by hand. Although I am looking into a Mr. Clean auto dry
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Pepper (2000) .:. Nanners (1967) .:. dot Mac Gallery It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice |
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I have the blade but if you don't get every drop of water off then you get spots (I made the mistake of letting my brother dry my car while I washed his for the prom on Thursday.) Just make sure to get the rest of the water because on a Black car like ours it definitely makes a difference.
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I got the blade for quick drying of the water then follow it up with my P21s drying towel...which is basically an overpriced Absorber synthetic shammy.
http://www.superiorcarcare.net/p2dryintow.html The blade is good at getting sheets of water off the car fast so you don't spend as long pushing water back and forth on the car until you absorb it all.
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marvins_dad ~ antoineCheck out Marvin's Website!!! | Beetle Pic Thread | Personal Pic Thread | DFW New Beetle Club Forums | Farewell TJ - Missed! |
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I bought a California Waterblade. Let's just say it is bad ass. I HIGHLY recommend it to all of you, friends. With this tool and a drying cloth, drying is super easy. The blade is nice and flexible and the curvature of our beautiful cars poses no problem. The only problem areas are the small nooks and crannies. Wish I would've gotten one sooner.
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