ONR made a believer out of me!!!!!

I've had a bottle of this stuff lying around since last fall, but never really gave it a shot. I hate washing my vehicles at home because I have hard water and usually have to wash in the sun. So, I get awful water spots, even when I rinse carefully and try to dry quickly. I use a leaf blower with a water wand attachment, but the water is still hard to blow off...it seems to cling to the surface, even though I use BFWD as a final step (makes the paint pretty smooth and slick).

So, used ONR as directed: one panel at a time, from the top down. What amazed me is that I still used my blower/wand attachment, but the water just RUSHED off the paint, leaving me very little wiping to do with a microfiber. And it sure fixed my hard water issues, leaving no streaks or spots. Wipedown was very painless.

I'm not sure I saved much time over the old hose-rinse method, but the results were sure worth it. I'll sure be using it in the future.

Jim

Thanks you for the post.

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I've had a bottle of this stuff lying around since last fall, but never really gave it a shot. I hate washing my vehicles at home because I have hard water and usually have to wash in the sun. So, I get awful water spots, even when I rinse carefully and try to dry quickly. I use a leaf blower with a water wand attachment, but the water is still hard to blow off...it seems to cling to the surface, even though I use BFWD as a final step (makes the paint pretty smooth and slick).

So, used ONR as directed: one panel at a time, from the top down. What amazed me is that I still used my blower/wand attachment, but the water just RUSHED off the paint, leaving me very little wiping to do with a microfiber. And it sure fixed my hard water issues, leaving no streaks or spots. Wipedown was very painless.

I'm not sure I saved much time over the old hose-rinse method, but the results were sure worth it. I'll sure be using it in the future.

Jim


Why would you still be using a leaf blower?? If you're using it as directed and washing one panel at a time, you'll dry the panel quicker with a microfiber towel than using a leaf blower, at least with this process.
 
Why would you still be using a leaf blower?? If you're using it as directed and washing one panel at a time, you'll dry the panel quicker with a microfiber towel than using a leaf blower, at least with this process.

Cuz it's faster and easier than using a mf, and don't have to thru a dozen MFs drying.

Jim
 
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