Remove brake dust from alloy wheels permanently?
Discussion
Help!, chaps and chapesses.
Have always had the problem that I can't keep brakedust from adhereing to my expensive alloy wheels. I do many, many, miles per year (120000kms) and I can't spend hours every weekend polishing wheels. Has anyone a patent recipe here? I thought of a teflon coating so that when one goes through the wash the wheels are cleaned? or anything similar? Can't use steel wheels and hub caps as I have a performance car with a wheel size that's not produced in iron......
Have always had the problem that I can't keep brakedust from adhereing to my expensive alloy wheels. I do many, many, miles per year (120000kms) and I can't spend hours every weekend polishing wheels. Has anyone a patent recipe here? I thought of a teflon coating so that when one goes through the wash the wheels are cleaned? or anything similar? Can't use steel wheels and hub caps as I have a performance car with a wheel size that's not produced in iron......
There are special brake pads you can buy, "Green stuff" I think, which give off much less dust. Find 'em in Demon Tweeks, or similar. You can also get covers that go inside the wheel, outside the disc. Possible disadvantages might be overheating brakes if you're wont to go mental for long periods, and we might not be able to see those tasty red calipers through your giant Momo's...
Don't string me up for this but.....
WD40 provides an invisible coating on the wheel and while the brake dust does stick to it when you wash the car it simply flows away.
Please be careful though - I have tried this only a couple of times (as I can afford the time to clean mine)on my company car and if you get WD40 on the disks braking can be a real event I had to drive with my foot on the brake for about a mile - what's that smell!
WD40 provides an invisible coating on the wheel and while the brake dust does stick to it when you wash the car it simply flows away.
Please be careful though - I have tried this only a couple of times (as I can afford the time to clean mine)on my company car and if you get WD40 on the disks braking can be a real event I had to drive with my foot on the brake for about a mile - what's that smell!
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I was also once advised to apply cooking oil / olive oil to the wheels to achieve the same result, this is wiped on and so avaoids puttin it on the brake discs..... however I have not tried this
I find ordinary furniture polish works pretty well if you start with a clean wheel, it soon looks horrible but wipes off taking the brake dust with it. Unfortunately if you leave it too long (i.e. weeks) it wears off. I tend to be lazy during the winter and have to give all the wheels a thorough clean come spring time.
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Apart from the cooking oil and changing your brack pads, you could try not using the bracks at all
After all you are driving on the autoband or you could just get some one else to wash your car for you
Well, autobahns do have numpties who want to risk their lives changing into the outside lane when you're travelling at 250+kph and brakes are advisable in that case.. and someone else to clean the car...?? You volunteering??
I know it always seems that there are products in the US that help with this sort of stuff, but since that is where I live, that is what I know...
Mothers www.mothers.com makes a Clear Coat Wheel polish that acts as a wax on your wheels. While it doesn't eliminate the brake dust, it does enable you to just spray them off with a hose and "float away" the dust. I am sure there are comparable UK products out there. Or you could just try a regular wax. I think the idea is to put an invisible barrier between the dust and your wheels...
ErnestM
Mothers www.mothers.com makes a Clear Coat Wheel polish that acts as a wax on your wheels. While it doesn't eliminate the brake dust, it does enable you to just spray them off with a hose and "float away" the dust. I am sure there are comparable UK products out there. Or you could just try a regular wax. I think the idea is to put an invisible barrier between the dust and your wheels...
ErnestM
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