Basically: Distilled is much cheaper but needs to be processed in advance through a slower process of heat + evaporation and therefore you'll have to buy in bulk and fill your tanks or gallons. Or make your own full distillery system, which would be very expensive upfront. Deionized water is pushed through filtration systems with special resin that can be done fast and on demand but requires replacing the resin as it loses it's effectiveness as you use it. You need to determine how many gallons you need (with a good car soap, you really just want to do your final rinse with the special water, while the rest can be normal tap) and how frequently you wash.. is it just for your own car once a month or something or is it daily for a detailing job? Then you can answer the question yourself looking at the math of how many gallons you'll go through and which system is more practical for you. But yes, they both work perfectly fine for preventing spots as they should be free of any solids in normal water.
I prefer distilled water because the process it went through by evaporation which is 100% sure no hardwater content the deionized water in the other hand is processed by filtration and sometimes the resin when it is used for a while it will not absorb the hard water as it used to be so some of hard water can go through and you will eventually see hard water on your car.
I dry it with a Toro plug-in leaf blower. Dust, dirt, or other particles can get trapped in your distilled water droplets then when it evaporates those particles get left on your paint surface.
Hi Jay, both methods work, since they both will be free of impurities (by ion removal or boiling) You can buy a de-ionizer for washing your car for around $200.
Carwash Country okay , ima put one in my shop but I found a spot called pure Tec and they last longer then the ones available I’ve seen. But you pay $15 a month and $65 for exchanging but they last up to 700-1500 gallons and they can deliver it every week. I was thinking about selling the water also for approximately 15-20 cents a gallon for the other mobile Detailers in my city. But one spot has distilled water at 10 cents a gallon in my city. That’s why I asked what’s better. Is distilled cheaper?
Full blog post: www.carwashcountry.com/distilled-water-detailing-when-to-use-it/
Another genius like me... i still find it mind boggling that people havent figured this out yet for their cars!! Thank you sir! Preach on!
bless people like us
Your volume is about 4x lower than most videos.
Basically:
Distilled is much cheaper but needs to be processed in advance through a slower process of heat + evaporation and therefore you'll have to buy in bulk and fill your tanks or gallons. Or make your own full distillery system, which would be very expensive upfront.
Deionized water is pushed through filtration systems with special resin that can be done fast and on demand but requires replacing the resin as it loses it's effectiveness as you use it.
You need to determine how many gallons you need (with a good car soap, you really just want to do your final rinse with the special water, while the rest can be normal tap) and how frequently you wash.. is it just for your own car once a month or something or is it daily for a detailing job?
Then you can answer the question yourself looking at the math of how many gallons you'll go through and which system is more practical for you. But yes, they both work perfectly fine for preventing spots as they should be free of any solids in normal water.
I prefer distilled water because the process it went through by evaporation which is 100% sure no hardwater content the deionized water in the other hand is processed by filtration and sometimes the resin when it is used for a while it will not absorb the hard water as it used to be so some of hard water can go through and you will eventually see hard water on your car.
Awesome, just what I needed clarification on. Thank you!
happy to help!
If you fully rinse in distilled do you even need to dry??
I dry it with a Toro plug-in leaf blower. Dust, dirt, or other particles can get trapped in your distilled water droplets then when it evaporates those particles get left on your paint surface.
Great video! Only con is audio too low. Thanks for sharing your knowledge 👍🏾👍🏾
I CANT HEEEAAARRRR YOU. SKIP
Water is such a con game. LAW Land Air Water. Pay to get contaminants removed and pay again to put minerals back in.
So distilled or deionize
Hi Jay, both methods work, since they both will be free of impurities (by ion removal or boiling) You can buy a de-ionizer for washing your car for around $200.
Carwash Country okay , ima put one in my shop but I found a spot called pure Tec and they last longer then the ones available I’ve seen.
But you pay $15 a month and $65 for exchanging but they last up to 700-1500 gallons and they can deliver it every week.
I was thinking about selling the water also for approximately 15-20 cents a gallon for the other mobile Detailers in my city.
But one spot has distilled water at 10 cents a gallon in my city. That’s why I asked what’s better. Is distilled cheaper?
@@36jayh how did u find out who sells water in yo city did u google it or u know someone?
@@hoodietwan6248 exactly what I’m asking
Very weak voice no good