7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

Given how briefly cars tend to stay clean in winter, many people don't bother washing their cars at all this time of year. However, thanks to all the grit, salt and grime on the roads, it's more important to keep your car clean now than it is at any other season...
7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

Wax

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

With all the salt, grit and other rubbish thrown at it, your paintwork could do with an extra layer of protection. This is something wax will provide. Ideally you want to be waxing before the crappy weather hits, but it’s not too late to give your ride a damn good cleaning and waxing session if you haven’t already.

There are countless kinds and brands you can use; we currently have a tub of Autoglym HD Wax making its way through the CT office which has impressed us so far. We’ll be going into what wax is and why it’s important in a little more detail soon.

Snow foam

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

If you have a pressure washer and a snow foam lance, it’s worth using them on your car frequently to get the worst of the grime and salt off. If it’s not something you’ve used before, it’s worth looking into: it’s just a case of coating the car in a thick layer of the stuff, leaving it to do its thing for a little while, and rinsing off both the soap and all the grime it’s combating.

It’s a good thing to do before you go for a full wash as it takes care of most of the abrasive road grit you’d otherwise be rubbing into your paintwork, and if you followed the previous step and have a nice protective layer of wax on the car, a simple snow foam treatment might be all you need to get your car cleaned to a satisfactory level - what’s known as a ‘non contact wash’.

If in doubt, hose the crap out of it

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

If you don’t have a pressure washer, a normal garden hose will suffice for keeping all that nasty winter rubbish off your paintwork. It’s particularly important to focus on areas like the wheel arches, where a build up of muck means moisture retention and in the long term - rust.

Use rubber floor mats

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

Temporarily replacing your fabric floor mats with hard-wearing rubber versions seems like an easy enough step, but how many people actually do it? They’re cheap to buy, and you’ll be much happier jumping into your car with muddy shoes when you know you won’t have to spend all Spring gettng the grime off.

Don't forget to dry

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

As we’ve discussed before, drying is an important part of car washing. But it’s especially important in winter; after all, when it’s particularly cold, you don’t want collected water to be freezing your doors shut…

There are specific products out there for post-wash drying, but a clean microfibre cloth will also work well. Out of all the detailing stuff we’ve tried out this year, we’ve settled on Meguiars microfibres as our favourites.

Don't drive like this

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

Mucking about in the snow is a surefire way to coat the underside of your car in salt, mud and all kinds of other crap. Still, it is rather fun, so this is one you could maybe ignore, so long as you’re happy to put in the time de-mucking after. Or alternatively, leave the snow-based japery to another car. Which leads me on to our final point…

Don't drive your car at all

7 Ways To Keep Your Car Clean Through Winter

Just as abstinence is the ultimate form of contraception, the best way to keep your ride clean in winter is just to not drive the damn thing. If it’s precious enough, it’s worth considering buying yourself a winter beater you care much less about, like our man Jake Orr who recently bagged himself a $900 ex-police Ford Crown Victoria. That way, your pride and joy stays safely tucked up at home, while your beater takes the brunt of the bad weather.

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Comments

Anonymous

Got rid of my 1.0 ecoboost fiesta for a 1.7 astra van for winter…handbrakes not bad 😏

12/10/2015 - 13:06 |
2 | 2
Erik Ludlow

How about yes to winter driving

12/10/2015 - 13:09 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

But in that McLaren gif, there is no salt, close to no mud, so why is it bad? You are fine doing that on unplowed roads.

12/10/2015 - 13:09 |
72 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

That clean pure white snow before salt and sand turns it into mud. That feeling.

12/10/2015 - 15:54 |
10 | 0
Delightful Citizen (Classic Truck Squad)

You dry your car with a microfiber towel?

12/10/2015 - 13:38 |
0 | 0

Seems redundant….

12/10/2015 - 15:15 |
0 | 2

YES! Air drying is bad and there’s no better thing to use for drying than MF towels

12/10/2015 - 15:18 |
2 | 0

You should do it dude :)

12/10/2015 - 15:19 |
2 | 0
Al Bilanito

This won’t be a problem for me at all, because I don’t have a car.

12/10/2015 - 13:46 |
12 | 2
Anonymous

unless you own a POS 80s american vehicle like my bronco which rusts no matter what lol

12/10/2015 - 13:50 |
6 | 2
RachetStrap

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

lmao . Or you’re stuck upstate and only have one daily . Salt is unavoidable

12/10/2015 - 14:05 |
8 | 0
Anonymous

Much better than AutoGlym or Meguiars, personal preference of course, but I’m right ;) http://www.autofinesse.co.uk/

12/10/2015 - 13:53 |
0 | 0
Chris Ricardo

I love driving in the snow like I’m Colin McRae. But I take the time to jack the car up and power wash the underbody after I do so that the salt and sand don’t rot my car away.

12/10/2015 - 14:14 |
0 | 0
ramses rizal

Thanks for the article,but i lived in tropical country which have no snow at all,at least if the weather is already gone wrong like in 2012 movie i’m already know what to do with snow.

12/10/2015 - 14:25 |
0 | 2
Alesia Yasmin

If I’m not mistaken, that is a mp4 in the gif?

12/10/2015 - 14:28 |
0 | 0

It is :)

12/10/2015 - 15:50 |
0 | 0