Bluepica 4th Gear November 6, 2013 Share November 6, 2013 I have cleaned the WS with glass cleaner, I have changed the wiper blades (Denso from petrol kiosk), yet the layer of fog still exist when the wiper is in use every time it rains.... and also the wiper will leave small streaks of water behind (not completely wipe of the water)... Anymore thing to take note? Thanks. ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Watwheels Supersonic November 6, 2013 Share November 6, 2013 (edited) You fill a glass with water and put ice cubes into it, why is the surface of the glass cup got a layer of fog? Edited November 6, 2013 by Watwheels 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kb27 Supersonic November 6, 2013 Share November 6, 2013 Your window has a layer of oily film build-up. You need to get the proper cleaner to remove the film. Try those oil-film remover at Autobacs. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gunny76 Clutched November 6, 2013 Share November 6, 2013 Had similar problem in the past. The fog is caused by heat generated by friction when the wiper can't glide on the glass surface smoothly. In my experience, the problem was typically caused by the wiper fluid solution + waxed glass or Rain-X kind of solution. After using water only, much lesser problem. Still fogging a bit, but negligible. I believe it's ok to use wiper fluid as long as you don't use rain-x or any other glass wax. If you have applied this to your windscreen, you can use glass compound to rub it off. It's a lot of elbow grease, though... been there done that. But I personally can't stand the windscreen without Rain-X. Watermarks accumulate very fast without it. So, a bit of foggy glass is fine with me. Lesser problem compared to rubbing the windscreen with glass compound every few months. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
ACEGT Clutched November 6, 2013 Share November 6, 2013 Hi bluepica, Seems like your WS is not cleaned properly. Wash with wax free shampoo. Followed by using a 3M super micro fine grade sand pad to sand down with some water. The sand pads can be bought at Autobacs or Stamford tyres. Rinsed off residual. Hope this helps! Remember to clean your wipers too. Most likely contaminates are on the wipers too as you have used it. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bluepica 4th Gear November 6, 2013 Author Share November 6, 2013 hmm... sounds like Rain-X is the culprit... but I have already clean it many times with glass cleaner... Ok now will try those glass polish and grease remover as suggested and see what's the outcome. Thanks all Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ungtiong 2nd Gear November 7, 2013 Share November 7, 2013 Rain X or similar solution can give you that effect. Also if you apply car wax on the WS (soe polishers do that) Also WS may be 'dirty'. Use newspaper (dry) can remove the oil film but that is when its cold outside and there seems to be a permanent fog you cann wipe off. Also sometimes the wiperblade old liao. Just changing wiper can do the trick. Some wipers not suitable for certain cars (dont ask me why...i tried Denso, cheapo brand yaka...someting, frameless silicon...all fail, then buy back rubber blade from original stockist for original wiper = solve liao) Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kangadrool Supersonic November 7, 2013 Share November 7, 2013 (edited) 1. Use only water for the wiper fluid tank. Do not add any other fluids including cleaning solutions. 2. Clean your wiper blades regularly by using a wet tissue to rub over. 3. Use mama lemon dish washing liquid to clean your windscreen (to remove oily film, grimes and dirts). All these cost less than 20 cents weekly. Stock wiper blades can last many years, at least 3 years, even in hot sunny Singapore. It is in winter countries that the wiper blades suffer the most damage in snowy conditions. Edited November 7, 2013 by Kangadrool Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tarquin 1st Gear November 8, 2013 Share November 8, 2013 Try to use wiping with IPA first then wash off with dishwashing liquid and rinse...use paper towels or old newspapers to dry... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Knoobie Supercharged November 8, 2013 Share November 8, 2013 On 11/7/2013 at 1:55 PM, Kangadrool said: 1. Use only water for the wiper fluid tank. Do not add any other fluids including cleaning solutions. 2. Clean your wiper blades regularly by using a wet tissue to rub over. 3. Use mama lemon dish washing liquid to clean your windscreen (to remove oily film, grimes and dirts). All these cost less than 20 cents weekly. Stock wiper blades can last many years, at least 3 years, even in hot sunny Singapore. It is in winter countries that the wiper blades suffer the most damage in snowy conditions. it depends! if you always use your wiper to wipe bird shit leh?? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pisces69 6th Gear November 10, 2013 Share November 10, 2013 On 11/6/2013 at 6:43 AM, Bluepica said: hmm... sounds like Rain-X is the culprit... but I have already clean it many times with glass cleaner... Ok now will try those glass polish and grease remover as suggested and see what's the outcome. Thanks all If its raining just use yr AC n after a short while, the fog/mist wil disappear. If its outside, just use wiper to clear it away. But I had a simple soloution to prevent fog on the other windows b4. I just use a damp cloth n apply a small amount of AmourAll n wipe the inside glass. No more fog after that. ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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