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Originally posted by Rusty Bumper Another variation of this tip is to find an older hose and cut off a section of it near the female threads (Maybe 10" or so) and screw it on the end of your garden hose after removing the spray nozzle.
This helps to protect your finish by having something soft on the end of your hose, instead of the usual metal threads. Not to mention that the extra piece of hose can channel the water a little better into a more rounded, unified stream for flooding the paint with.
You can also use one of those cheap screw-on cut off valves to stop the flow of water. I always have one attached between the hose end and the spray nozzle, or cut off section of hose.
I did that and it works great! I was wondering who to credit for that idea. Now I know. I read it somewhere on Autopia or some other forum. Here's what it looks like:
It significantly improves the flow of water and really helps to minimize drying time. Thanks for the idea RB!
Originally posted by Rusty Bumper Another variation of this tip is to find an older hose and cut off a section of it near the female threads (Maybe 10" or so) and screw it on the end of your garden hose after removing the spray nozzle.
This helps to protect your finish by having something soft on the end of your hose, instead of the usual metal threads. Not to mention that the extra piece of hose can channel the water a little better into a more rounded, unified stream for flooding the paint with.
You can also use one of those cheap screw-on cut off valves to stop the flow of water. I always have one attached between the hose end and the spray nozzle, or cut off section of hose.
Great idea there. I used to keep alot of the garden hose quick connects around. I might have to find my zipock baggie full of those and start using them again. Would make for fast easy swap of hose ends. Either make up a cut of hose as you have or possily just use one of the QC male ends
Originally posted by Rusty Bumper Another variation of this tip is to find an older hose and cut off a section of it near the female threads (Maybe 10" or so) and screw it on the end of your garden hose after removing the spray nozzle.
This helps to protect your finish by having something soft on the end of your hose, instead of the usual metal threads. Not to mention that the extra piece of hose can channel the water a little better into a more rounded, unified stream for flooding the paint with.
You can also use one of those cheap screw-on cut off valves to stop the flow of water. I always have one attached between the hose end and the spray nozzle, or cut off section of hose.
Good one Rusty. Now that will be my newest modification/addition to my routine.
Another variation of this tip is to find an older hose and cut off a section of it near the female threads (Maybe 10" or so) and screw it on the end of your garden hose after removing the spray nozzle.
This helps to protect your finish by having something soft on the end of your hose, instead of the usual metal threads. Not to mention that the extra piece of hose can channel the water a little better into a more rounded, unified stream for flooding the paint with.
You can also use one of those cheap screw-on cut off valves to stop the flow of water. I always have one attached between the hose end and the spray nozzle, or cut off section of hose.
I too use this method and as crazy as it sounds (to a person that has never tried it), it works. Sure beats needing to use tons of MF Towels (or more then one Water Magnet).
One trick I have picked up from other MOL users is removing the hose nozzle for a final rinse. On a well waxed vehicle I'd say a good 80-90% of the water sheets right off. It takes a little practice but I am sure that some of the more experienced folks get more water off than that.
Something I found that helps me on the sides is to actually hold the open end of the hose reasonably close to the finish at a good upward angle, say 80 degrees, let it push the water upwards. This seems to slow the water down a bit to let it sheet better. Holding the hose close to the finish also helps to avoid splashing water onto surfaces where the water has already sheeted off.
Editing here. I think I remember a thread with pics of someone demonstrating this. If someone stumbles across it, could you please post a link here? I am looking but can't find.
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