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Windscreen Wash


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14 minutes ago, London Best said:

Use neat screen wash in very cold weather, no water.

The one I'm using at the moment is ready mixed.

4 minutes ago, billytheghillie said:

Vinegar

Good idea.

47 minutes ago, Yellow Bear said:

isopropanol if you can find it otherwise more concentrated screen wash additive. 

I've got some (not a lot) but it's used to make case lube, and expensive too. 

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2 minutes ago, London Best said:

Tried that, it was no good at all in freezing conditions. Save it for Summer.

I agree. I've just read on an Autoglass website page, that spraying the windshield/windows with a mix of vinegar and water, then wiping it off, protects the windscreen from frost. This is only good for when parked up etc, but a good tip (?)

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Cleared the ice off my car this morning, used de-icer and set off. Gone about 100 yards - car went past me and sprayed some dirt on my screen. Turned on washer and wipers, my screen froze up. Pulled up sharpish and cleaned it again, then waited until the screen had warmed up a bit. I will not be using pre-mixed screen fluid again this winter.

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My windscreen cleaning routine.

1. Whilst eating my breakfast, using my phone, switch on the car's climate control.

2. After breakfast, unplug the overnight charger, step into beautifully warm car, relishing the heated seats and warm steering wheel.

3. If necessary, spray the windscreen with the usual diluted mix. The hot screen ensures that it doesn't freeze.

4. Drive silently away.

Smug? Moi?

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hello, i got fed up with buying cheap ready mix from the £ shop and why pay £3 in tesco, i bought a large container of good quality undiluted from a local motor factor dealer for £5  it will do 20 fills, if the screens frosty in the morning i just pour warm water over and bit of ice spray, 

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I just use a garage. No scraping, no spraying, no warm water for the last 38 years since I built the garage.
Incidentally, I always found the bigger problem with freezing screen wash is the jet nozzles freezing rather than the fluid freezing on the screen.

Edited by London Best
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Read an article where a delivery driver was using a cheap bottle of vodka from a sprayer bottle to clear his windscreen on these frozen mornings, he also put some in the washer bottle reservoir to keep that unfrozen. Could use any alcohol in fact so if you have got an unfinished bottle of cheap stuff bought from some distant holiday in the past that you no longer fancy, jobs a good un.

Same as using isopropanol, but easier to get hold of.

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17 minutes ago, Flyboy1950 said:

Read an article where a delivery driver was using a cheap bottle of vodka from a sprayer bottle to clear his windscreen on these frozen mornings, he also put some in the washer bottle reservoir to keep that unfrozen. Could use any alcohol in fact so if you have got an unfinished bottle of cheap stuff bought from some distant holiday in the past that you no longer fancy, jobs a good un.

Same as using isopropanol, but easier to get hold of.

I think I'll drink the cheap alcohol and stay indoors until the spring! :)

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Gentlemen, you are all missing a trick apart from London Best and his old technique of parking indoors.   :good:

 

I clean the glass on my vehicles and then treat the glass with Automate Rainguard Class Cleaner.

 

It leaves a very smooth clean surface that clears quicker when covered in frost.

 

I also have a simple cover which goes over the windscreen the night before a poor weather forecast shows expected low temperatures.

 

Oh and the heated windscreen helps too.

 

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What I used to do, before I went electric, was pop a fan heater into the car before breakfast, then by the time I was ready to go, the car would be toasty and completely clear of frost. If I needed to use the washers, the screenwash hit a warmed screen.

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A note on Isopropanol and other forms of alcohol is the seals in the pump might not fair too well but it easily obtainable via flebuy.  I spotted in Aldi yesterday a screenwash booster capable of treating 25 litres however the cars my wife and I own have heated screens and mirrors and at minus 5 they take only a couple of minutes to clear so regular screenwash is all we use.

Edited by sportsbob
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