Car Covers?
LL - NY
larrycleung at gmail.com
Sun Mar 26 21:50:05 EST 2006
Stuff that manages to blow under the cover. I always had a clean car B4
applying the cover, and used a California Duster just prior to putting it
on. FWIW, with the UrS in the garage, I have NO problem using the cover
(dirt still ends up ON the cover, but the car is squeaky clean). I will
admit, I didn't figure out a way to feed a line all the way around the rim
of the cover to attempt to keep it from having any lower openings, however I
rather doubt it would keep the dust from working it's way up under the
cover. If you truely have a wind sheltered area, and think you can seal the
bottom of the cover effectively, then a WeatherTech cover would be the
ticket.
LL - NY
On 3/26/06, Alex Kowalski <hypereutectic1 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Is this the dirt that was already on the car before the cover was
> installed and shifted around, scratching the paint, or stuff that manages to
> blow in underneath the cover? I know, telling the difference is probably
> difficult, but I think I could abate the latter, or at least hold it at
> bay. I can park the car in a place where it's shielded from the wind and
> there's very little on the ground to get picked up and blown underneath the
> cover..
>
>
> On 3/26/06, LL - NY <larrycleung at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > IF you MUST use a cover, I'd recommend WeatherTech from CoverCraft. I
> > have
> > one for the //S6. HOWEVER, I found, what little dirt that made it under
> > the
> > cover still scratched the paint. Unless you are in a windless area, I'd
> > forego the cover.
> >
> >
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