Stage I Pre-Wash vs. Foamgun Pre-Soak

Accumulator

Well-known member
A few people have posted their experiences with the Stage I so I thought I'd present it a little differently. If you're not familiar with either of the approaches mentioned in this thread's title you might have to do a little research to follow this.



Note that when I tried the Stage I on a *very* dirty ("winter-dirty") car, it didn't seem to do much of anything. I had been ready to write it off as snake oil. I usually pre-soak with the foamgun but it doesn't really do all that much either.



This time, the MPV was just the right level of dirty for a comparison between the two approaches- not so dirty that neither would do much, not so clean that neither was worth doing.



The foamgun contained my usual "by-eye" mix of Griot's Car Wash. No idea how strong it was but it sure wasn't weak and it "looked right" to me :o Great controls in this experiment, huh ;) It's not rocket science; the Griot's shampoo doesn't seem to strip the LSPs I use so I mix it up pretty strong and adjust it as required, judging by how the suds/foam look, by using the mixing valve on the foamgun. I generally err on the side of "too strong".



I did try to be as methodical as realistically possible when comparing the two approaches. I first rinsed the entire vehicle. Using panels that were uniformly soiled, I treated half a panel with the Stage I and the other half with a sudsy spray from the foamgun. I waited, and then rinsed and inspected.



The Stage I *did* pre-clean a little better than the foamgun mix. You could see the difference, but it wasn't a *huge* difference. Neither approach is miraculous. Still, whatever I can do to prevent wash-induced marring is worth doing in my book.



Repeating the process did not have any appreciable effect.



What *did* seem to make a difference was combining the two methods. I tried using each one first, followed by the other, and I *think* the best way is to use the foamgun first, let it soak for a little bit (long enough for the excess to run off) and then spray again using the Stage I. Using both pre-treatments was an improvement over only using one or the other.



Whether using *either* is worth the time, expense, and hassle will be a personal decision. I can't say if either really helps prevent marring as I'm using my non-marring wash technique anyway. But IMO it adds an additional margin of safety.



But again, if you're looking for a dramatic pre-treatment effect, you won't find it in either form of pre-treatment.
 
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