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How do i remove water spots?

Take a dry cotton cloth and wipe properly after washing the car, it removes all water spots. After dry it applies a wax.

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Old 11-06-2012, 01:09 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Take a dry cotton cloth and wipe properly after washing the car, it removes all water spots. After dry it applies a wax.
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Old 11-06-2012, 09:57 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ToyBoyz View Post
Take a dry cotton cloth and wipe properly after washing the car, it removes all water spots. After dry it applies a wax.
^^ do not listen to this guy.

Sounds like you might need a full detail. Wash your car, some prefer to use dawn to strip the old wax, then CLAY bar your car(that should get most if not all the waters spots) you can always try some kind of water spot remover or vinegar if they done come out the first time. Then just proceed with the rest of your full detail, sealant, glaze, polish, wax. If you use a good sealant, water spotw wont by much of a worry. I use Adams quick sealant
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Old 11-06-2012, 05:17 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Good Afternoon,

Removal of Hard Water Spots from paint can be tricky. One method is to try using claybar on the area to see if that removes the mineral contaminants (water spots). Another method is to use some sort of correcting polish and a machine. Something like Adam's Swirl and Haze Remover on the Flex 3401VRG Polisher or Porter Cable 7424 should kill whatever spots aren't into your clear coat. If they are a little deeper, you would need to use something like Adam's 4" Focus Kit. It's a polishing kit that you use on a Cordless Drill. From there, it would be key to come back over it with a Dual Action Machine, to remove the tiny buffer trails the Drill left.

The pic below is something I hit at a show over the summer. I spent all of about 10 minutes on the good side of the hood. Clay, Swirl and Haze Remover, and Fine Machine Polish.

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Old 11-07-2012, 08:29 AM   #19 (permalink)
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I have water spots on my outside mirrors and windows (was like that when I purchased a couple of months ago). Would vinegar be the answer for the water spots?
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Old 11-07-2012, 02:47 PM   #20 (permalink)
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I have water spots on my outside mirrors and windows (was like that when I purchased a couple of months ago). Would vinegar be the answer for the water spots?
For GLASS, I would recommend .0000 Steel Wool and Denatured Alcohol. My family owns a residential glass business, and I have been doing this ON GLASS ONLY for years.

Mook
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Old 11-07-2012, 05:19 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Perfect. I will try it this weekend. Thanks for the tip




Quote:
Originally Posted by Mook@Adams View Post
For GLASS, I would recommend .0000 Steel Wool and Denatured Alcohol. My family owns a residential glass business, and I have been doing this ON GLASS ONLY for years.

Mook
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Old 11-07-2012, 08:44 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mook@Adams View Post
For GLASS, I would recommend .0000 Steel Wool and Denatured Alcohol. My family owns a residential glass business, and I have been doing this ON GLASS ONLY for years.

Mook
Interesting! I've clayed my glass after washing it. Works well too.
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Old 11-09-2012, 03:15 AM   #23 (permalink)
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Apple cider white-colored vinegar will do the key, but it odors fairly bad so you have to clean the car again soon after and make sure you dry it quick enough not to get more areas. Also, using a purification inline with your normal water hose to provide you a identify free clean can help after you get rid of the current areas.
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Old 11-13-2012, 06:06 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mook@Adams View Post
For GLASS, I would recommend .0000 Steel Wool and Denatured Alcohol. My family owns a residential glass business, and I have been doing this ON GLASS ONLY for years.

Mook
Worked like a charm. Had to use a bit of elbow grease, but after a couple rounds, the glass and mirrors looks much better.

Thank you
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Old 11-13-2012, 06:14 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mook@Adams View Post
Good Afternoon,

Removal of Hard Water Spots from paint can be tricky. One method is to try using claybar on the area to see if that removes the mineral contaminants (water spots). Another method is to use some sort of correcting polish and a machine. Something like Adam's Swirl and Haze Remover on the Flex 3401VRG Polisher or Porter Cable 7424 should kill whatever spots aren't into your clear coat. If they are a little deeper, you would need to use something like Adam's 4" Focus Kit. It's a polishing kit that you use on a Cordless Drill. From there, it would be key to come back over it with a Dual Action Machine, to remove the tiny buffer trails the Drill left.

The pic below is something I hit at a show over the summer. I spent all of about 10 minutes on the good side of the hood. Clay, Swirl and Haze Remover, and Fine Machine Polish.

Your water spots don't look etched into the paint to be honest... If you DO have them etched, buy yourself a dual action buffer, and use some of whatever Adam's recommends, or use something like Meguiar's ultimate compound, which is what I used... I feel comfortable with the setup because since it's not aggressive, it makes it harder to really ruin the clear coat... Yeah, it might take longer than getting something more aggressive, BUT its still 100 times easier than doing it straight by hand!
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Old 11-13-2012, 06:22 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Add on: I used a REALLY crappy one from Walmart branded as Turtle Wax for $20 for the 6", $23 for the 10"... And I used the generic foam bonnets that some with it... NOT the greatest, but its cheap as hell and it worked for me... I WISH I took a before and after, but I didn't... Me and my buddy did both of our cars, the whole thing, worked longer on problemed areas, and neither of us could be more satisfied... He has a 1994 black RX7 and the front bumper was WHITE because the paint was soooooo bad, after a good buff with those cheap things, its back to black, and we couldn't be happier...


If you DO go with the WalMart solution, remember the foam bonnets TEAR VERY EASILY (You get what you pay for...) So just place it once, and try not to adjust much, or adjust using the stretchy things holding them on. If you do rip them, call the company (Carrand) and say they were ripped straight out of the box, and they'll send you a free replacement (mine took 2-3 days to get)
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Old 02-15-2013, 11:41 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by N8GTOL View Post
White vinegar will do the trick, but it smells pretty bad so you have to wash the car again immediately after and make sure you dry it fast enough not to get more spots. Also, using a water filter inline with your hose to give you a spot free rinse can help after you get rid of the existing spots.
Where can I find inline filters made for garden hoses? I checked Lowes and Home Depot with no luck.
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Old 03-16-2013, 08:33 PM   #28 (permalink)
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griots garage has them but they are expensive - although time is money and if they save time.....
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Old 03-16-2013, 08:50 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Some people swear by using a clay bar. What they don't know it was developed in the 30's for removing overspray from the paint. When the manufacturers couldn't sell enough of it, they started packaging the stuff for the car enthusiast. Every time you use it, you're removing a fine layer of clear-coat.

From carcareonline.com

"Clay: Literally a plasticene/abrasive mixture used to smooth new paint and remove fresh paint overspray. This type of product must be used with lots of lubricant. The technique of using a clay is a learned skill. Use too little lubricant or get contaminants in the clay and you have moved into scratch city. This is one product that is the fast lane to trouble if not used with extreme care. I do not recommend frequent use of this type of product. You literally grind off a small amount of paint. It should be used as was intended, to grind off paint overspray or contaminants that may not be dissolved with a solvent."
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Old 03-16-2013, 09:34 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by 122554 View Post
Some people swear by using a clay bar. What they don't know it was developed in the 30's for removing overspray from the paint. When the manufacturers couldn't sell enough of it, they started packaging the stuff for the car enthusiast. Every time you use it, you're removing a fine layer of clear-coat.

From carcareonline.com

"Clay: Literally a plasticene/abrasive mixture used to smooth new paint and remove fresh paint overspray. This type of product must be used with lots of lubricant. The technique of using a clay is a learned skill. Use too little lubricant or get contaminants in the clay and you have moved into scratch city. This is one product that is the fast lane to trouble if not used with extreme care. I do not recommend frequent use of this type of product. You literally grind off a small amount of paint. It should be used as was intended, to grind off paint overspray or contaminants that may not be dissolved with a solvent."
You say all this... So you're saying clay bar is a BAD tool?

And the mild clay bar that 99.999999999% of people use, the consumer grade, um... I can't see that taking clear coat off... Ever...
I mean the "fine layer" must be .1 micron, if that, so 1/10000th of a mm.

So yeah, after you clay your car... 500,000 times, you might eat through it...
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