Friday, January 28, 2011

Educate yourself on the right way to de-ice your vehicle

Cold winter temperatures mixed with precipitation are an icy recipe for your automobile. In the span of a few hrs, ice can cover the entire outside – and sometimes inside – of your car. Do not just hammer and scrape away. Learn the proper way to de-ice your car. Source of article – Learn the right way to de-ice your car by Car Deal Expert.

Get the snow brushed off your vehicle

Brushing the snow off is a simple way to stop your vehicle from getting ice on it. Both snow and ice are a solid form of water, and moisture from snow will freeze and create ice that can coat your windshields, door handles and locks. Make sure you regularly brush the snow off. It doesn't even matter if you plan on driving anywhere. A broom could be used if you don't have a snow brush. A snow brush works too though. It’s a really poor choice to make an effort to use a snow shovel to do it. It could chip the paint or windshield a bit. It is also a poor choice to use boiling water on frozen locks and handles. More than likely, something will break.

With regards to ice, your hand can be of use

If you’ve built up some callus studying karate – or even when you have pent-up aggression you need to take out on your car – give that ice a whack with the flat of your hand. You are able to probably break it and brush it off if the layer is thin enough. Do not use anything harder than your hand, however – particularly on window ice. A shattered window is expensive and horrid to deal with during winter months, and cold glass tends to be more brittle.

Warming up to Jack Frost

Start that car, turn on the headlights and run the heater as well as both front and rear defrosters to loosen things up for cleaning. Just make sure the exhaust pipe and radiator grill are clear before you do. Do not leave your engine after you start it. If it is really cold and the radiator's coolant/water mix is off, this could be very bad. It won't help to have things frozen. You are able to kill your engine if it overheats because of this.

When utilizing your windshield wipers blades, don't just use them whenever you want. Make sure they are thoroughly clean first. Sometimes the blades are stuck in the ice and need to get hot before working. This might cause the engine on the wiper blade system to break. Ice could be melted with some winter-grade wiper fluid also. help melt window ice, as well.

Citations

Popular Mechanics

popularmechanics.com/cars/how-to/repair/how-to-fix-and-ice-covered-cars

Or you could just cover your car

youtube.com/watch?v=vcx7t4qe0gs



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