WHen you say "cool", do you mean "chilled" colder wheels and not blazing hot?
OR do you mean "rad, excellent, nice, etc." wheels?
SaabGuy
WHen you say "cool", do you mean "chilled" colder wheels and not blazing hot?
OR do you mean "rad, excellent, nice, etc." wheels?
SaabGuy
"Rad" is a word that is not used nearly enough these days. I think he meant "not warm" though. Most wheel products usually say you should wait for the wheels to cool before using.
Here in Sydney (Australia) we're now on 'level 3' water restrictions. 8-) We've been banned from using a hose on 'hard surfaces' (which includes cars) since level 2 restrictions were introduced last year when the average dam level got down to about 60 percent. Now it's heading down to about 45 percent, so the water restrictions get ramped up. I don't know what 'level
4' entails.I usually use buckets of water, changing regularly as the paint on my 900S (1983 model) tends to come off when washed so the water in the buckets turns milky white quite quickly. 8-)
Craig.
Bingo. Cool as in under 90degF (~35C). I'm in Florida and the best time is in the morning...otherwise the wheels heat up too much and the stuff dries before you can scrub.
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