I wash my van maybe every 3-4 weeks. Of course it depends on the road conditions.
I always wash it myself .....
At home, I sponge it by hand and use a pressure washer to rinse it. I like taking time to rinse under the wheel wells .. tires, brake components, tie rods, etc ... as much stuff as you can reach.
On the road, I'll use a self service car wash. Here's the trick that's gonna save you some $ .... you do not need to continuously feed the machine while you're washing. The only way to get it clean is to use the long brush. You'll spend the majority of the washing time brushing. So here's what you do ..... you only need to use 2 settings on the machine - 1.Rinse & 2.Foam brush. Feed the machine the initial cost for one cycle, whatever that amount is ... let's say $2 for 2 min. During that first 2 min, quickly rinse the van with clean water (30 sec), then spend 90 sec applying foam to the van. You're simply applying soap ... don't worry too much about covering every single square inch. Make sure to get more foam along the top portion of the van, it'll slide down and be useful. When the machine turns off .... spend the next 10 min scrubbing the heck out of your van. Try not to let it dry out too much ... doing this when the sun is down helps. When you're finished scrubbing, feed the machine another $2 & rinse thoroughly. Total cost = $4
Another thing I do .... when cleaning my front windshield at truck stop, I often clean the roof portion above the windshield, the side mirrors, the front headlights & whatever else looks terrible .... use the squeegee for all that stuff. It's ok ... it's free & doesn't take too much time, you're basically keeping trouble spots clean. The side mirrors on Sprinters stick out like elephants ears & if bugs dry on them for even 1 day they become very stubborn to clean.
Hope that helps ....
Oh, next time you pass through ND on 94 there's a Tesoro station in Jamestown that I absolutely love. It's right off of 94. In the diesel lanes they have a huge plastic wash basin, maybe 2-3 ft wide, filled with super soapy water and a full size broom sitting in it. You can literally wash the entire front of your van while you get fuel.
Thanks for the wonderful advice.
I started with the windshield cleaner, and that cleaning off the fresh new mess has been wonderful.
The mistake I “believe” made is when I would wash it, I wasn’t getting the top perfectly clean, so I wouldn’t apply any spray wax. So, the more I did that, the harder and harder it got to clean the top. Finally, even scrubbing away with soap flowing out, I couldn’t get the top clean. Honestly, driving through a hard rain cleaned it better than the scrub brush.
Anyhow. I used to be a painter, and would often get paint on my vehicles. I remembered using Gunk Tar and Bug Remover, which was incredibly effective in removing oil base paint. While I have had trouble locating a can of that, the engine cleaner by Gunk is the exact same material, only it sprays in a straight stream (helpful for the tall front van). Another degreaser I used was Shout in the metal aerosol can. If the Gunk Engine Degreaser will get it clean easier, then I can get it perfectly clean, and use the spray wax, which will make the next cleaning easier. Long story short, no more half @ssing it, either get it perfectly clean, or don’t clean it at all. The half efforts are just stripping away the light wax, making it harder to clean in the future.
Once I get home, I can give it multiple coats of hard wax.
Blah blah blah, thank you all for your help.
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