How do you get hard water stains off your paint?
#751120
07/18/10 11:11 AM
07/18/10 11:11 AM
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 6,005 Reno, Nevada
NV69B7RR
OP
master
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OP
master
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 6,005
Reno, Nevada
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Our water here really sucks, and it will leave hard water stains where every a drop will dry, even in the shade. Does anybody have any ideas on how to get these off my RR. i tried windex, and wax, neither worked so far. I just don't want to damage the paint, trim, or wheels in the process.
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Re: How do you get hard water stains off your paint?
[Re: NV69B7RR]
#751125
07/18/10 04:58 PM
07/18/10 04:58 PM
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 122 St. Paul, Mn.
Jim_S
member
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member
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 122
St. Paul, Mn.
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Another thing that works is Vinegar and Distilled water mixed 50/50. Be aware it also strips the wax off too.
69 Roadrunner 383 stock
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Re: How do you get hard water stains off your paint?
[Re: NV69B7RR]
#751126
07/18/10 05:30 PM
07/18/10 05:30 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,285 West Coast, USA
jbc426
master
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master
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,285
West Coast, USA
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We have hard water here too, and I just finished the black paint on my 1970. Water spots galore on all my cars until I started doing this. There are a few things you can do, but the bottom line is to do your final rinse with de-mineralized water. From my experience, the spots dissolve almost immediately in water. The least expensive way is to buy several gallons of distilled water from the market, and pour it over your car when your finished washing. Second option, buy a Hudson Sprayer style garden sprayer. Fill it up with the gallon jugs of distilled water and final rinse the car with that. You know, the kind with a plastic tank that you pump up and spray weeds and such with. Use it only for rinseing your car, so it won't get contaminated. If you don't want to keep lugging home gallon jugs, have a home-use reverse-osmosis system installed in your house or install it yourself. The added benefit is great drinking/cooking water etc. You can buy a good one from Costco. This last idea is initially the costliest, but one of the best. Hook one of these up to your house/garage. http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product.asp...&lang=en-USThey say if you plumb the water from your Reverse Osmosis water system into one of these systems, it will last 25 times as long. You will probably need to add a second larger pressure tank to feed it effectively though.
1970 Plymouth 'Cuda #'s 440-6(block in storage)currently 493" 6 pack, Shaker, 5 speed Passon, 4.10's 1968 Plymouth Barracuda Convertible 408 Magnum EFI with 4 speed automatic overdrive, 3800 stall lock-up converter and 4.30's (closest thing to an automatic 5 speed going)
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Re: How do you get hard water stains off your paint?
[Re: Boise Chall]
#751129
07/20/10 12:59 PM
07/20/10 12:59 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 329 Cincinnati, OH
68red440
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 329
Cincinnati, OH
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Quote:
Meguiars speed glaze # 80 takes it right off I use show car glaze after the #80 and the paint is clean and water spots are gone then a good carnuba wax. I use a towel and the wax on wax off system I don't trust myself with a buffer. Keep it waxed and the water spots won't stick again they just wipe off. On the windows use rubbing compound ( the finest you can find from schucks or autozone) then rain X after the windows are clean to keep the water spots from sticking again. I hate water spots and it took me a long time to figure out a system that works. A tip on using glaze don't let the glaze dry like you would wax wipe it off before it hazes and it make the a lot job easier.
Last spring #80 easily took off sun-baked contaminants like water spots, sap etchants, bird poop etched in, etc. And it's really easy on the paint. I tried #7 last weekend. I applied it to the whole car and it dried up - not fun to remove. NXT wax & #7 gave excellent results though.
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Re: How do you get hard water stains off your paint?
[Re: Boise Chall]
#751130
07/20/10 03:34 PM
07/20/10 03:34 PM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 989 WI, USA
67dodge67
mopar addict
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mopar addict
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 989
WI, USA
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Quote:
Meguiars speed glaze # 80 takes it right off I use show car glaze after the #80 and the paint is clean and water spots are gone then a good carnuba wax. I use a towel and the wax on wax off system I don't trust myself with a buffer. Keep it waxed and the water spots won't stick again they just wipe off. On the windows use rubbing compound ( the finest you can find from schucks or autozone) then rain X after the windows are clean to keep the water spots from sticking again. I hate water spots and it took me a long time to figure out a system that works. A tip on using glaze don't let the glaze dry like you would wax wipe it off before it hazes and it make the a lot job easier.
I really like the Meguires product and of all things, turtle wax has a good carnauba cleaner wax too that works well.
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