Glass Cleaning Made Too Easy!?! Wolfstein's Zap Cloth

Todd@RUPES

Just a regular guy


Let's face it. We all love a beautifully detailed car, from flawless & swirl-free paint to steak-free, crystal-clear glass. In many cases, achieving streak-free glass is as difficult, if not more difficult, than burnishing a show-car-quality finish onto your paint.

Not to mention, after a long day of detailing, the last thing any of us wants to do is struggle with 20 square feet of glass....

Enter Autopia's newest glass care product: Wolfstein's Zap Cloth.

Wolfstein's Zap Cloth is made from a cheesecloth-like fiber known as Zezo-Fiber, which is unlike any other towel I have ever used in automotive detailing. Being over 200 times thinner then human hair, the Wolfstein's Zap Cloth claims to be able to clean your windows steak-free, using just water.

Being that my Mazdaspeed3 has had to serve daily driver duty for the last month, and the windows were trashed with highway mileage and frequent rainstorms, I wanted to put this towel to the test.

Note: The first time you use the Zap Cloth, make sure to rinse it thoroughly under running water. There is a chemical leftover from manufacturing that may cause streaking on the first use if it is not rinsed away completely.

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The description for the Zap Cloth claims streak-free glass quickly & easily. It doesn't specify how dirty of glass it will clean so I wanted to put it to the test.

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"Simply wipe the glass with a damp towel"... No way could it be that easy, or could it?!

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As I mentioned above (the pictures demonstrate), the glass was trashed. I found that the towel did an outstanding job at quickly removing road oil, dirt and even bug splatter (from the windshield).... However, because the glass was so dirty it would leave a light dirt streak...

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The solution was to quickly re-wipe the area using the clean, still damp side.

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IF the towel is too wet, you get very light little water spots... However, I did not touch them, and to my amazement, they dried COMPLETELY CLEAR!!!

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I quickly did my whole car (by this time the towel was soiled) and took a picture of the side glass to show how streak free it was!!!

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General Observations:

  • Product works as described.
  • Make sure to rinse thoroughly before first use.
  • Make sure your final wipe is done with a "just damp" towel that leaves a streak pattern no greater than the above streaky picture.
  • While I didn't experience it, I would imagine a "too wet" towel could leave streaks.
  • This was the fastest & easiest way I have ever cleaned glass.
  • Works perfect on interior glass, although you may want to dedicate a wetter first wipe, wring out extremely well, and do a barely damp second wipe.


Personal Observation/Analysis:

The Wolfstein's Zap Cloth will immediately be added to my detailing arsenal, but it will NOT replace a traditional glass cleaner? Why? I'm glad I asked...

Because, using the Zap Cloth on my dirty windows quickly soiled it. It can be washed and reused in the same manner microfiber towels can, but once soiled to this level, it quickly loses effectiveness (until washed).

Instead, I will use it as a "final wipe" to ensure streak free glass, after removing any soiling and heavy oil build up with a traditional glass cleaner. You will save time in the cleaning step by trying to buff the glass to a crystal clear finish. Simply clean well, get it relatively streak-free, then quickly wipe with the Zap Cloth for a perfect, easy-to-achieve finish every time!

Of course, you could use this towel after washing the car (and thus removing all the soiling) to get streak-free windows every time, adding just moments to your regular wash routine.
 
Some of them have a very gritty feel, that's what he's referring to. These are definitely going on my list. What's the life out of these? Right now I'm very please with 1z windscreen an a reliable ww mf.

I'd imagine you would not want to get bird droppings on this as well, use something before hand.

Also kudos to the stop texting sticker, I love it!
 
I ordered two just ten bucks..just to check them out..hope they work as well as Todd makes them look...because I don't care for glass work all that much
 
Is this similar to the Car Pro towel?? Same concept?

Exactly what I was thinking. Fast Glass, I believe is the name. Everything I've heard about the CarPro product is good, and now with Todd's endorsement of what appears to be a similar product, it may very well be time to bite the bullet and try it out.

Actually, I don't think I can buy it for a couple more years... Way, way too many Microfiber Madness Cloudbuster Glass Cleaning Towels have been bought. I don't know what I would do if I found an easy product that didn't require expensive towels!
 
So do you wash them like a normal microfiber? Or just run them under warm to hot water and hand scrub them? Going to have to pick these up if they are that awesome.
 
So do you wash them like a normal microfiber? Or just run them under warm to hot water and hand scrub them? Going to have to pick these up if they are that awesome.


I wash them with other glass towels. No glass towels go in with paint microfibers due to the potential of polymers transferring and streaking the glass.

They are that awesome too! It used to take me days to get all streaks out of my windshield! Now I get crystal clear results with one or two passes, every time!

Welcome to Autopia Forums!
 
Is this similar to the Car Pro towel?? Same concept?

I believe you mean the CarPro-USA towel? To my knowledge, CarPro does't manufacturer or label a glass towel (I could be wrong). I have never used the CarPro version, so I cannot answer that. However, I can tell you that these (the Wolfstein ones) work great!


How many times can you reuse it?

I would assume quite a few. If you get it soiled it will loose effectiveness, but once you wash it, performance will be restored. I would assume the usable life should be greater than a loose-fiber microfiber towel.



Have to order. Just wash when dirty?

Yes.

So do you wash them like a normal microfiber? Or just run them under warm to hot water and hand scrub them? Going to have to pick these up if they are that awesome.

I haven't really tried either (yesterday was my first time using it) but I would assume anything that doesn't leave behind a filler products (scents or softeners) would work just fine.
 
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