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This product has been excellent with wheel faces and barrels, tires, and calipers. I’ve been using it for years. I dilute it to a 1/5 ratio with water and it still cleans with great results. Spray on, scrub with a soft bristled brush, and spray off.Interested to learn what other are doing to keep their yellow calipers clean.
I love my car but the brake dust is a bit much and calipers are not looking as clean as I would like.
I got my wheels and calipers including barrels ceramic coated is there a product you think I can use to safely clean without disturbing the coat? Also is it safe to use wheel brush?One thing I've done with my past 3 sport cars, is putting ceramic coating on the calipers. This discourages brake dust from sticking to them and makes them easier to clean.
Did you coat yourself or have a shop do it? No risk to the coating with power washer ? Do you use soap ?+1 on the ceramic coating. I have CQuartz UK 3.0 on mine and all it takes is a blast from the power washer and it's 97.6% clean.
I just use soap/water and a rag. A coarse brush will remove the ceramic coat. That said, no ceramic coat is permanent and depending how often you rub the brake dust off, my detailer said it could last up to a year+. As others have said, anyone can purchase and put on ceramic coating. As usual, there are good references on YouTube. The real skill is doing the paint correction before applying ceramic coat, but that doesn’t apply to rims and calipers.I got my wheels and calipers including barrels ceramic coated is there a product you think I can use to safely clean without disturbing the coat? Also is it safe to use wheel brush?
Did you coat yourself or have a shop do it? No risk to the coating with power washer ? Do you use soap ?
I usually just run my cars through a car wash.
Drying your car with a leaf blower? Genius idea, I will have to give it a try!CQuartz UK 3.0 is a DIY product, most shops probably would not install it as they would want something more durable with a 5-10 year life span. I think CQuartz UK 3.0 is officially only 2-3 years?
Power washer are generally fairly gentle to the paint if you use it correctly. Don't use anything more aggressive than a 45 degree spray head and stay at least 6 inches away from the paint. Let the soaking do most of the work. I use Chemical Guys snow foam. The process is generally: quick wetting down with the power washer, spray foam cover and wait 3-5 minutes, rinse off with power washer. At this point, if I decide to contact-wash the car, I would spray on another layer of snow foam and rub the car down with a towel, then rinse off. To dry the car, I now use my electric leaf blower, which does a great job.
Drying your car with a leaf blower? Genius idea, I will have to give it a try!
Excellent, I'll give it a go!Yea, with ceramic coating, it works really well. There are short nozzles sold for popular electric leaf blowers to make this task easier. I 3D printed one for mine.
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