How often to wax??
#1
Driver School Candidate
Thread Starter
How often to wax??
Apologies if this has been discussed .. point me to it. I live in San Diego have the white, ok Starfire Pearl 2013 350ES. Garage at home; outside and not under cover at work. Obviously not a lot of rain, but lots of sun. Doesn't get too dirty but I have no interest in washing/waxing the car myself anymore. I do pay for the hand wax at the Car Wash .. but would be interested in suggestions as to how frequently to get waxed. Thanks.
#2
Lead Lap
If you go onto the Meguiar's web site you will find that you can enter the conditions that your car exists in such as sun, no cover, heat, snow, etc. They will give you a plan for protection from the elements. Exterior and interior and a schedule.
www.meguiars.com
www.meguiars.com
#3
Remember that product vendors are in the business of selling products. And, service vendors are in the business of selling services. If you let them decide the schedule and the process, they will have you do it far more often and use far more product than is really needed.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
#4
Lexus Fanatic
I would never wash a car with just water. You need a soap solution to encapsulate dirt and lubricate the process. Using just water you're grinding dirt into the paint surface. Washing will wear away wax over time. If you want something more durable, have a sealant or permanent coating applied.
Have it waxed every 3-6 months, you'll be fine.
Have it waxed every 3-6 months, you'll be fine.
#5
I would never wash a car with just water. You need a soap solution to encapsulate dirt and lubricate the process. Using just water you're grinding dirt into the paint surface. Washing will wear away wax over time. If you want something more durable, have a sealant or permanent coating applied.
#6
Lead Lap
I wash and wax my car by myself, about twice a month in the spring and summer and at least once a month in the winter depending upon if we have snow - on my driveway in Pennsylvania... I use high end wash - including soap - and wax as the car is always outside and the paint is beautiful. I would concede, however, that this frequency is not necessary in SoCal and that 3-4 times a year for waxing would suffice. I'm one who enjoys doing it...
#7
Auto Detailing Master
iTrader: (2)
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
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#9
Lead Lap
And there are numerous car wash solutions that do not remove existing wax on the car.
#10
Lexus Fanatic
If anybody doesn't want to or can't use a hose to wash, I would recommend Optimum No Rinse:
http://www.autogeek.net/optimum-no-rinse.html
#11
Lexus Champion
iTrader: (13)
Remember that product vendors are in the business of selling products. And, service vendors are in the business of selling services. If you let them decide the schedule and the process, they will have you do it far more often and use far more product than is really needed.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
However, I respectfully disagree with you on washing the car with water only. Like many others have pointed out, without proper lubrication, you will grind dirts/contaminants all over the paint and that will make more damage to the paint more than anything else. If you do this with a few times, I guarantee you will have swirl marks everywhere and if you do few more times, I guarantee you will have scratch and if you continue doing this, your factory clear coat will be gone quickly and in few years, your paint gonna be beat up. Then, the only recovery option is repainting it. I know you can save money from not buying car wash shampoo but it will cost way more to correct the paint itself. To be honest, car wash shampoo isn't that expensive. I spent roughly 50 bucks on it to wash 2 cars bi-weekly for the entire year. I think you are not that cheap lol.
#13
Remember that product vendors are in the business of selling products. And, service vendors are in the business of selling services. If you let them decide the schedule and the process, they will have you do it far more often and use far more product than is really needed.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
A huge part of keeping wax on a car is, to refrain from removing the old wax from the car. When you wash a car with soap, it removes the wax. If you remove your wax, then you have to put new wax on or go without.... That takes a lot of labor and material each time you do it.
The trick is to use just plain water, with no soap, most weeks. Get it wet, touch every surface with a wet mitt, rinse it off, and chamois dry. The water and touching loosens the dirt, and the rinsing takes it off, without removing the wax. New wax is needed only two or three times each year. The wet-touch-rinse-dry process only takes about 10 minutes per car.
your paint?
#14
You might try a synthetic paint sealant vs. wax. Synthetic paint sealants claim to last longer than waxes. I use Meguiar's #21 about 2x per year and live in the greater Cleveland, OH area. I would do it more, but I am covered in snow about 9 months out the year! I do not do much more than wash it from November - May due to the cold weather, snow, etc.
My process 2x per year is as follows:
I do this before winter and after winter. After an initial use of #105, I usually only use this in spots as needed vs. doing the entire vehicle. Also, even with my 2x per year method, using the clay bar does not take that much time and the clay is pretty clean.
My process 2x per year is as follows:
- clay bar
- Megiar's #105 where needed, or the entire vehicle if it is the first time I am ever doing it
- Meguiar's #205
- Meguiar's #21 synthetic paint sealant
I do this before winter and after winter. After an initial use of #105, I usually only use this in spots as needed vs. doing the entire vehicle. Also, even with my 2x per year method, using the clay bar does not take that much time and the clay is pretty clean.
Last edited by lexus997; 11-10-14 at 12:07 PM.
#15
Apologies if this has been discussed .. point me to it. I live in San Diego have the white, ok Starfire Pearl 2013 350ES. Garage at home; outside and not under cover at work. Obviously not a lot of rain, but lots of sun. Doesn't get too dirty but I have no interest in washing/waxing the car myself anymore. I do pay for the hand wax at the Car Wash .. but would be interested in suggestions as to how frequently to get waxed. Thanks.