Hand Washing vs. Automatic Washing
University Research - University of Texas At Arlington
Research Study Shows That Hand Washing of Cars at Home is Harmful
to Automobile Finishes
The International Carwash Association working through a special
Carwash Research Foundation Grant to the University of Texas at
Arlington, Texas, has conducted extensive car washing tests this
past year to determine the effect on car finishes by comparing various
car washing techniques ranging from professional car washing to
the bucket and sponge used by many auto owners.
Hand washes are extremely harmful to automobile finishes - Tests
conducted by the University of Texas to compare surface disturbances
showed that a single home hand wash on an automobile can produce
scratches that penetrate as deep as 1/10 of the total thickness
of the automobile's paint.
These test findings at the University of Texas substantiated tests
done over ten years ago by the Technical University of Munich, Germany,
in association with Mercedes-Benz, which at that time showed that
similar damage was done to an automobile when using detergent, low
water volume commonly found in hose nozzles at home, buckets of
water, sponges and towels used in the average home car washing.
Specific scientific tests at the University of Texas further showed
that hand car washing can produce so many marks on a car's finish
that they cannot even be counted. The tests showed that in all hand
washing temperatures, surface reflectance readings steadily declined,
with some hand washing techniques being considerably worse than
others. By contrast, when cars were washed by professional full
service car washes, there was virtually no change in the surface
reflectance or shine readings.
The tests showed that the average backyard hose is not able to
supply enough water along with the detergent action to avoid damaging
the car's finish. The most harmful method of washing cars was found
to be the special "car wash" brushes that hook on to a
garden hose and are purchased from local hardware stores or automotive
supply dealers. The use of this type of brush with the low water
pressure that comes out of the garden hose is the most destructive
on the finish of an automobile. The tests also showed that techniques
used at professional car washes are virtually harmless to automobile
finishes. Findings from the University of Texas research study indicate
that with the large amounts of water and specialized detergents
used in professional car washes, sophisticated gloss and reflectance
meter readings from new finishes used on automobiles were virtually
the same before and after the equivalent of several months of normal
washings in a professional car wash.
The professional car wash is able to provide and use tremendous
amounts of water along with specialized detergents and appropriate
mechanical action from cloth pads and curtains which the backyard
hose and bucket hand car wash is not able to supply. This important
and interesting research study performed by the University of Texas
found that today's automobile owner is much wiser to have their
car washed by a professional car wash, rather than washing it at
home in their own backyard.
The Technical University of Munich has carried out an impartial
scientific comparison test in association with Mercedes-Benz to
establish the exact ranking of hand washing versus machine washing
of vehicles relative to damage to paintwork.
To make the test as realistic as possible, typical family sedans
were used - with a few hundred miles on the odometer. It was stipulated
that each car was to receive the equivalent of one year's wash stress
(about 25 washes) - some cars by hand washing methods, others by
automatic carwashing equipment.
To make the test as realistic as possible, and to give both the
hand washers and the automatic carwashing equipment something to
get clean, five test vehicles were thoroughly coated with a mixture
of street dirt, under-fender dirt accumulations, oily water, and
thawing-salt residue. This test mixture, inspected under a microscope,
contained grit particles measuring between 0.5mm and 1.0mm which
are enough to damage the toughest paintwork if not carefully removed.
The Hand Wash
Without having been told the why's or the wherefore's, four men
were given the chore of washing four of the test cars by hand. Each
person was to do as thorough a job as possible. Since there were
four people involved, and since each person used their favorite
"tools", together they presented a cross-section of various
hand washing techniques commonly used by average car owners.
So the marathon carwash began. The four men showed up in four
different sections of town enthusiastically sponging and lathering
their test cars as if they were their very own. Bystanders could
see one man hard at work in a do-it-yourself self-service type of
car wash with high-pressure water facilities; another was busy at
home with the garden hose and a water spray-brush. One man scrubbed
away utilizing a bucket, a sponge, and a garden hose. One, to the
horror of the environmentalists, and in defiance of local regulations,
washed his test car at a lakeside.
The Automatic Wash
As the alternative to the perspiring hand washers, automatic carwashing
equipment was used to wash the fifth test car. To keep the test
above board, the test vehicle arrived unannounced during the hours
when the car wash was open for business. The car was washed along
with other cars.
The Examination
To measure the extent of paintwork damage, microscopes were available.
However, pure reflecting microscopy, as well as electron microscopy
results merely in a visual picture of scratches. A comparable measure
of true depth cannot thus be achieved. Consequently, a method of
analysis was used which could determine the exact depth of the scratches
and grooves, namely, the interference-microscopic analysis method.
This method allows the glossy surface, with all of its irregularities
to appear like a relief map. An interference band is created and
corresponds to the contours. Band distances are 0.27 of one thousandth
of a millimeter, thereby allowing even the tiniest grooves and scratches
on the gloss to be accurately measured and compared.
The Result
The comparison tests produced results of which every car owner should
be aware. Automatic car washing and hand washing have completely
different effects on automobile paint.
How does the paintwork of a car appear after 25 washes - equivalent
of a year's worth of washing?
The results are depressing, at least to the car owner who, up
to now, has firmly believed in hand washing. The deepest scratches
after hand washing had a depth of more than one-tenth of the paint
surface. Under the microscope, the paintwork looked like a cratered
landscape. The paintwork was deeply scored and scratched - the result
of dirt and trapped sand particles.
In hand washing, invariably too little water is used. Even with
a garden hose and a sponge technique, small sand particles lodge
themselves firmly in the fine pores of the sponge or wash mitt and
cannot be removed even by good rinsing. Such particles work on the
paint surface like sanding discs. Furthermore, the hand washings
produced a tangle of uneven scratches in the paint surface.
By comparison, the surfaces of the test vehicle washed with automatic
carwashing equipment appeared different. Compared with the hand
washed surfaces, it was remarkably smooth, with many very fine markings
virtually parallel and uniform - less than .0003mm - the result
of evenly moving and rotating cloth pads and curtains. The machine-washed
surfaces were in very good condition after 25 washes.
Wash a car by hand or by machine, in either case, it looks immaculate
right after the wash. The sophisticated test described suggests
that looks are deceiving: The paintwork on a car washed by automatic
carwashing equipment is in much better condition than one washed
by hand - even though the car owner lavishes tender, loving care
on their vehicle.
Eventually, either by force of habit or because the car finish
looks dull, the weekend hand washer resorts to the lengthy and back-breaking
chore of applying abrasive rubbing compound or similar pastes and
liquids to their vehicle. This process indeed restores the luster
to the finish. Such "pampered" cars naturally appear to
have just rolled out of the showroom. The proud motorist forgets
the long hours with the rubbing compound, and is probably unaware
that the reason for all that work (to get the scratches out) was
their energetic hand washing procedure on previous weekends.
On the other hand, the motorist who uses the services of a professional
car wash with their automatic carwashing equipment subjects the
paintwork of their vehicle to the thorough, but gentle action of
cloth pads and curtains which treat their paint job with tender,
loving care. Knowing that the car finish has to have some protection
against the ravages of the chemicals in the air and to also provide
a barrier of protection against bird droppings and other contaminants,
this car owner will periodically apply a coat of wax to their vehicle.
At that moment, their car looks as if it had just rolled out of
the showroom.
In comparison, although both cars after washing and other treatment
will look pretty much the same, a car is actually treated better
(especially concerning the paint finish) by machine washing at a
professional car wash and the application of wax than a car washed
by hand (with the resulting need for the application of rubbing
compounds, etc.). However, in the process, the car owner who utilized
the services of a professional car wash has saved a great deal of
time, labor, and effort.
|