Anonymous wrote:black cars look great, the day you drive off the show room lot, and the day after you have them professional detailed.
its veru difficult to keep them look great. the water spots is a resul tof the har water.
get your self a cordless blower to use on your car after you wash to blow the bulk of the water off. then use a shammy (chamois) to spreat out the last drplets so they dry with out leaving residue.
I use a synthetic shammy called he absorber. love it. you will have to wax/detailclean your black car more frequently to keep it looking good.
i use micro fiber towels to wash my car. and I wash the towels in the laundry.
quick notes. really hose the car down good and try to knowck off as much hard debris as you can. sand salt, ect. since if you put your soapy towel over a spot with crusty dirt, you will just be wiping around the custy dirt and scratching the clear coat/paint.
work top to bottom, saving the wheels for last.
never every wash a hot car. or spray water direclty on the hot wheel/sbrakes or engine.
do not neglect the engine. open the hood and hose it down from time to time.. light spray nothing hard and direct at any componets.
Anonymous wrote:Can it do moonwalk?
Anonymous wrote:Don't want to derail your thread but could people also give advice about keep black interior looking nice. My car is brand new and every speck on the seats shows (not leather).
Anonymous wrote:My recommendation is to take your car to a place where people will wash it by hand. The automated ones tend to leave streaks or residue, as you've experienced. That and accepted that your car will not look clean all the time. Arguably winter is the worst because of the white residue of road salt.