Since it seems to be snowing throughout the entire country now, I figured I'd post how I clean snow off my car without marring it.
What you will need:
Snow Joe (or Snowbrum), scissors, and the nicest microfiber towel you can sacrifice (I am using an Eagle).
Take the blade off the snowjoe, and lay it over your towel so that the edge of the towel folds to just past the center of the snowjoe:
Now, you're going to cut a hole just in the center where the pole screws into the blade:
The pole should go through the hole and be able to screw in:
Now, you'll see the clips that hold the pole to the blade when its collapsed. You will need to make a slit for each of them:
And then fit the clips:
Fold the other side of the towel over, and repeat for the other clips:
And you should have this:
There you go! Obviously, a larger towel would work better but all of my detailing towels are this size.
Now, as long as your car is sealed, the snow should easily just slide right off the paint in big sheets and the towel will save the paint as best as possible.
If for some reason (like me) you drop the contraction on the wet ground, just toss out the towel and make a new one. You will never get all of the crap off of it, and new ones are cheap!
What you will need:
Snow Joe (or Snowbrum), scissors, and the nicest microfiber towel you can sacrifice (I am using an Eagle).
Take the blade off the snowjoe, and lay it over your towel so that the edge of the towel folds to just past the center of the snowjoe:
Now, you're going to cut a hole just in the center where the pole screws into the blade:
The pole should go through the hole and be able to screw in:
Now, you'll see the clips that hold the pole to the blade when its collapsed. You will need to make a slit for each of them:
And then fit the clips:
Fold the other side of the towel over, and repeat for the other clips:
And you should have this:
There you go! Obviously, a larger towel would work better but all of my detailing towels are this size.
Now, as long as your car is sealed, the snow should easily just slide right off the paint in big sheets and the towel will save the paint as best as possible.
If for some reason (like me) you drop the contraction on the wet ground, just toss out the towel and make a new one. You will never get all of the crap off of it, and new ones are cheap!