High Tech Clean From 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.

Those first cars were dusted more than washed because they had no covering to protect the moving parts and leather seats from moisture. Washing the family care probably felt more like dusting the oldest furniture, only with oil and grease being wiped up more than just dander particulates. If it was not kept dry and clean, then rust was sure to initiate the process of engine death.

Metals became standard in new car bodies, and leather could now live inside the water-tight vessel. Washing the car was something even young children could do as a chore, and hoses were stocked at local tool stores. Certainly, every American Teenager has had a parent throw a five dollar bill their way if they soap up the car one time and give her a rinse.

Americans know washing the car is a truly meaningful part of their experience. Even now most men of any age will not hesitate to throw some money at a teenage girl in a bikini holding up a sign that promises a car wash performance of giggling girls, soap, and water. In no other circumstance would it be acceptable for any American man to look at a teenage girl in the manner allowed when he supports such fund raisers.

Those crazy kids in the 1970s came up with a new notion for washing cars, and the drive through automatic car wash was brought into being. It came with heavy rolling towels that scrub off dirt and sometimes some paint, then can self dry in preparation to remove excess moisture from the vehicle. The process was loud and it shook the car heavily, frightening even the adults, but terrifying toddlers into laughter.

These first automatic drive through establishments were built at filling stations as an addendum to gasoline purchases. They did not perform without error right off the drawing board. In fact, the first extremely unanticipated flaw revealed itself when the arms controlling those huge brushes were shown to be designed for a particular size of vehicle.

Sedans were the most common size auto, and so were safe unless something broke which caused an event involving spinning rollers from Hell. The towels on those rollers could kill, and many designs did not allow the metal arms to bounce back if they came into contact with the car. Scratches and broken glass meant the vortex of unforgiving towel wrapped metal madness had to change.

Those poor 80s kids saw a return of the old school chore washing the family car in the yard for slave wages. However, just like the auto industry itself, those engineers had a whole new design within months that used soap and water jets without anything else touching the vehicle. Those teenagers now are making real money working at one of their hands-on auto detail super malls that spring up every summer.




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