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Posted

1. Choose your snow foam

Before getting started, you will need to select a suitable snow foam for your car. Depending what you are looking for, you can choose from a variety of strengths for different cleaning tasks. You can even select from a range of rainbow colours and scents to make it a little more exciting.

2. Rinse your car

We recommend first giving your car a quick rinse in cold water before spraying the snow foam. This will allow you to get the top layer of dirt off your car before the foaming begins. So grab your pressure washer and start rinsing your motor down.

3. Fill your lance

To apply snow foam properly, you’ll need a snow foam lance. This is what you’ll equip to your pressure washer with the snow foam inside. Depending on the size of your car, you’ll need between 100ml and 200ml of snow foam liquid in your lance per wash. Use it sparingly as a little will go a long way.

Simply pour the liquid in first, then dilute with another 400ml to 600ml of warm water if necessary. It’s important to note that various brands of snow foam may have different ratios of water to formula so be sure to check this on the packaging. 

4. Connect your lance to the pressure washer

Attach the snow foam lance to your pressure washer. While the lance will typically come with a connector for your pressure washer, it’s important to ensure you have the correct connector for your specific washer, as this may vary.

5. Spray snow foam on your vehicle

Snow foam softens dirt so as not to get scratched into the paint during the washing process.

Now this is the fun part! Slowly walking the length of your vehicle on one side at a range of about three feet, start spraying the snow foam. Once you’ve sprayed the bottom, walk back along the same line to cover the top half of the same side.

Complete this same process around each side of your vehicle and the roof until the entire car is well covered.

Remember, walk slowly to ensure you cover every patch of bodywork. The snow foam won’t wash the dirt away, it will simply soften it in preparation for the car shampoo.

6. Wait several minutes

Once the entire car is covered in snow foam with no missed patches, leave it to sit for a couple of minutes. The foam will do its magic whilst you wait, tackling all the grime and dirt you have accumulated on your car since you last cleaned it.

Try and avoid leaving the foam on your car for more than a few minutes as it will start drying onto the car which can make it harder to wash off.

7. Jet wash the vehicle

Once you have waited a couple of minutes, detach the lance and rinse off the foam in neat sections with cold clean water from your pressure washer. We recommend working in lines from the bottom up to maximise your chances of removing grit and grime particles.  

8. Follow up

Last but not least, follow up with your preferred method for washing your car, whether that involves shampooing or applying a ceramic wax. Then dry using a microfibre cloth or car blow dryer if you have one.

Guide credited to: https://www.parkers.co.uk/car-advice/how-to-use-snow-foam/


Posted

Hello Steve, 

On the basis of healthy differences of opinion, I would never use a pressure washer on car paintwork. Yes, I know people do and have done, but you have to be experienced in pressure adjustment and distances of lances from paintwork. There is plenty of evidence to attribute lacquer delamination on their use. 
Just think what a pressure washer does for your concrete patios/drives! 
Kind regards,

Gareth. 

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