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Home > General > To clean/polish or not to clean/polish that is the question |
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mse Member Since: 08 Mar 2011 Location: Warwickshire Posts: 2916 |
Dirt is the product of a lazy person who doesnt know how to clean...mud is the product of an active person who has set out to do something and been doing it A clean car (which is a reflection on the person)...too clean (like the guy i saw cleaning his range rover for a convoy with a travel garden pressure washer) is sad as is dirty, which just shows a laziness. In all seriousness a clean and regularly clean car keeps the body work in better condition - FACT and if you extend cleaning to a proper underbody spray you add real value. Mike 2014 Facelift Discovery |
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Tue Aug 13 2013 3:53pm |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
Ah, I see a pattern - cleaner than your RRS is sad, dirtier than your RRS is lazy. 2012 SDV6 - it's missing a couple of cylinders
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Tue Aug 13 2013 4:21pm |
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drdelrrs Member Since: 02 Nov 2010 Location: UK Posts: 1163 |
With the typical price of the new RRS and FFR north of £75k and with the spare parts cost related to these prices my mud plugging is now limited to my two wheeled toys so it stays cleaner and is easier to clean when necessary .
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Tue Aug 13 2013 4:35pm |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
I think you may be right - in the UK at least, RRS and FFRR don't really get used off road and lots are bought as badge-snob alternatives to the X5 et al by those who want a 4x4 with credibility. I wonder how many people would have bought the RRS if it was called the "Land Rover Discovery Sport".
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Tue Aug 13 2013 6:44pm |
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mse Member Since: 08 Mar 2011 Location: Warwickshire Posts: 2916 |
Mine certainly isn't the clean stock...but I'll go with that scale
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Tue Aug 13 2013 7:54pm |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
And that is why LR products are now irrelevant as off road vehicles. LR may as well make X5 clones. They'd sell more because they'd be a good deal cheaper. Everyone who buys big shiny wheels and polishes their LR without ever taking it off road makes the price that bit higher for the rest of us... I hate to think what the Defender replacement will be. In 10 years time no one will believe that LRs were once working farm vehicles... 2012 SDV6 - it's missing a couple of cylinders 2008 TDV8 - it was a labour of love and is much missed |
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Tue Aug 13 2013 10:53pm |
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DaveM Member Since: 23 Jul 2009 Location: United Kingdom Posts: 40 |
No amount of cleaning is ever going to stop it depreciating (don't look, it's doing it now ....£. Another £... ) and modern cars don't rust to the extent they used to and we all probably keep them for considerably shorter periods as well so save your time and effort. A shiney 'detailed' car will only get dirty the next time you use it, or even if it rains and then you will have to do it all over again.... Life's too short |
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Tue Aug 13 2013 11:29pm |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
I tend to keep vehicles for several years. To keep paintwork in perfect condition over 5+ years would cost way more than the possible difference in value between "perfect paintwork" and "paintwork commensurate with the vehicle's age and mileage". A 100k miles car has minor scratches/swirls etc. It's a fact of life.
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Tue Aug 13 2013 11:50pm |
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DaveM Member Since: 23 Jul 2009 Location: United Kingdom Posts: 40 |
Just wot he said !! |
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Wed Aug 14 2013 7:16am |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
Polishing a vehicle is not "looking after it properly". That requires the owner to get things serviced on time, fixed with the correct parts, maintained mechanically to a high standard. A file full of receipts for work carried out is more important than shiny paintwork. I'd be much more impressed by a vehicle that had good quality tyres with correct wear patterns. A vehicle which had shiny paintwork but had cheap tyres fitted to aftermarket wheels would ring the odd alarm bell with me. Cheap tyres eh? Where else has money been saved? These things are expensive to run - if someone can't afford decent tyres, or a year's VED at a time (buying for 6 months at a time suggests a lack of cash) then they probably can't afford to get n iggling things fixed. The sort of niggling things that lead to expensive failures later on.
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Wed Aug 14 2013 4:05pm |
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mse Member Since: 08 Mar 2011 Location: Warwickshire Posts: 2916 |
Totally agree - i have to change my car every 12-18 months, but certainly clean cars and looked after cars fetch more.
If your keeping your car, clean cars do help keep the body work in good condition. Cleaning is part of a car care and maintenance package...you wouldnt not clean yourself, but visit the doctors for your medical every year, Part of servicing and maintenance is cleaning...how far you go is the question.
Its part of a package, not the only thing - but part of it...i wouldnt fit cheap anything, none branded oil, brakes or tyres (i should add a main dealer service doesn't mean well looked after either, nor does your local garage.) A clean and polished car stays cleaner longer and is easier to clean, making it nicer overall. Off road capability is very important to LR and to the new car, first people do off road and work them, second as they get older people will do it and finally i need mine to perform and i can throw it in some harsh conditions for work - it must always be able to do it. Mike 2014 Facelift Discovery |
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Wed Aug 14 2013 4:11pm |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
If I had bought a £70k vehicle I'd probably get it wrapped. Has the benefit of protecting the paintwork from all of those little scratches and stone chips that all vehicles get. On a 4x4 it also gives protection if you do decide to go for a green lane session.
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Thu Aug 15 2013 8:46am |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8980 |
I'd much rather be walking my dogs for a couple of hours... 2012 SDV6 - it's missing a couple of cylinders
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Thu Aug 15 2013 9:09am |
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Ady 555 Site Moderator Member Since: 12 Dec 2010 Location: Good old yorkshire Posts: 8738 |
I didn't buy my sport to go off roading, if i wanted to go off roading then i would of bought a defender. A clean car says a lot about the owner and usually there lifestyle. I also visit a lot of clients and like my motor to look clean. A filthy mucky car also says a lot about the owner. Ive always kept my motors in tip top condition and looking good. Hence ive never had a problem selling them on and ive always got good money for them. I see it, if you look after them, then they look after you. RRSTDV8, i think it has finally sunk in that you have bought your sport for its capabilities and not for its looks unlike most of us on here, and good on you. |
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Thu Aug 15 2013 9:15am |
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