Just ask them if they are insured for damage to your car...! I've seen them damage the surface paintwork on one vehicle from a dirty chamois.
|
Marcus, none of them seem to speak English, so I don't think they'd know what I was talking about!
HF
|
|
|
Teabelly - you are right, of course, although they still approach even when cars are clean.
V - I will treat your remark with the contempt it deserves, and decline to answer - except to say, it's FAR too cold to be out there cleaning my car at the moment ;)
|
Well, I'm proud to say that after getting up at lunchtime yesterday, I finally got around to cleaning mine, inside and out. :) When I got in this morning though I noticed that there's still a dirty patch in the middle of one of the doors :(
Wouldn't pay someone to do it though...
Blue
|
Blue - good for you :) I'm gonna have to do the same soon or I'm in for some serious nagging ;(
DavidHM - seems you must have struck lucky - 40 mins as opposed to 2 sounds much better value for money :) (although I'm never in any supermarket long enough to have a 40-minute clean - 10 mins maximum is my average). I've never seen any evidence of waxing, or hoses though, btw.
HF
|
|
|
HF - are you implying that you will wash the car when it gets warmer ?
IIRC the grime (and a few
strategically placed sandwich bag ties) were the only things holding your old R5 together ! ;-)
|
IIRC the grime (and a few strategically placed sandwich bag ties) were the only things holding your old R5 together ! ;-)
Actually V it was a bit of old rubbery stuff and some superglue that used to hold the bumper in place - very effective, too, till the day I finally retired the car to my garage, scraping it in the process against garage door, causing bumper to fall off.
And the sellotape that held the broken number plate in one piece did a very good job, too, for many months.
;)
|
|
|
|