E-mail to a friend X

*Required

  • (Separate multiple e-mails with a space)

Car-wash wars

Find out what wash is best for your auto and the environment.

By Dee Van Dyk

"In many cases you're sitting on a forty thousand dollar ride," says Jim Chapman, owner of Independent Wash Services, a car wash service and maintenance contractor. "It's easier to keep a clean car clean -- if you wash your car every week, you can go to the three dollar car wash and it'll come out clean as a shiny penny."

The three washes most commonly available to Canadian drivers are the self-service car wash, touchless automated washes and touchless tunnel washes.

Self service car wash
Most of us are well acquainted with these -- the coin operated, drive in and drive out washes. Their major advantage -- or disadvantage perhaps -- is that you can spend as much time on your car as you have coin in your pocket.

"The quality of the wash is directly proportional to the time and work you want to put into it," says Chapman. "It's one nick up from doing it in your driveway which is, of course, illegal in most Canadian cities."

It's a Saturday morning type of job, though, because you're likely to get a bit wet and dirty yourself as you wash your vehicle.

Touchless automated equipment
Touchless automated washes replace the friction washes that were once so hard on paint jobs. In a touchless wash, the equipment washes over your vehicle in a series of cycles.

The quality of wash, according to Chapman, is decent and the primary advantage is that you don't even need to get out of your car.

The disadvantage? The lineup to the wash is often much longer than the actual wash.

Next »



Your Comments

Comment reported

Thank you for reporting this comment as inappropriate.

Back to Comments »

Add your comments

Please fill in all required fields (*).

Back to Comments »

Advertisement







Featured Menu

Our Partners



Our Contests