Sunday, June 18, 2017

Keep Up With Changes At Autec Carwash

By Matthew Hughes


Designers of the first cars must look with amazement at leaps and bounds auto technology has taken. The gasoline engine has not changed much in the last century. However, the parts and accessories that accompany the engine have improved right along with advancements from Autec Carwash, so we can have clean cars that handle still hug a road at 100 mph.

A century ago, washing the car was kind of of like washing the horse, but many autos had no real metal on the roof or inside the carriage. In fact, washing the car was more like detail dusting furniture, only this furniture had oil and grime that the leather couch never encountered. If one failed to keep it squeaky clean and store their horseless carriage under a covering, then it was not going to be a running vehicle for long, because rust IS a thing.

Metal became the rigid outer shell of the newer models, starting from steel then utilizing the much lighter aluminum. This metal shell has allowed us to have automobiles that stay nice and dry on the leather. Additionally, areas exposed to moisture are not as vulnerable, and the encroachment of rust can take half a century to do any real damage.

Car washing has often been the task of pre-teens and teenagers. Some smart girl somewhere decided to put on a bikini and hold out a sign to wash cars for money, and the men roll in for an almost innocent show of soapy playful girls. These kids make enough money during such fund raisers to fly entire classrooms to European destinations.

The 1970s introduced a different approach to washing automobiles. Someone had the bright idea to put huge brushes on rollers inside a windowed room that sprayed soapy water from above. People could simply drive through this rough and tumble zone, come out with a shiny new clean on their hood, and scare the life out of their toddlers all at the same time.

Washes were part of gas stations, and they could promote laziness in teens while also making an extra dollar for every customer. There were still attendants at the pumps then, and they pimped dollar washes like fast food pimps fries. But time did reveal, original designs did not take into account every vehicle size or shape, and this resulted in mayhem followed by rapid redesign.

Sedans were the most popular auto style in that day, and was the style of car that pretty much all of the drive through car baths were designed for. Those big rollers spinning at high speeds were apt to damage little cars if they did not position it just right in the wash. Worse, the full sized vans were doomed when the metal arm came down to discover there was no room for it to maneuver, and no mechanism to spring back away from the vehicle.

Teen reality burned as they discovered that the most painful vehicle to wash was the very one that would never fit in the dollar drive through. Their days of not washing cars in the yard almost ended, but they were spared by advancement into touch/brush/scratch-free systems. Teens now get better pay at full service detailing jobs while some unnamed genius threw in the towel for water jets.




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