My daughters bought me a 11l DI Vessel for Fathers Day.
Just knocked up a trolley for it.....can't wait to put it to use now.
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DI Vessel
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Onlinepatriot66
- Lifer
- Posts: 3480
- Joined: Sun Jan 11, 2015 2:59 am
- Location: Mawdesley, Lancashire
DI Vessel
I like that ! Top job
Sterling Grey '03 2.5i SE / Infinitas Supercharger / S.M.G / Hardtop / Gloss Black 162s / Bilstein B4s / 3.0i Brakes / DLV De-Cat & Silencer / Rebuilt VANOS / Sonar 2Xcite Lights / Carbon & Alcantara Trim / M-Sport Seats / ...& Side Covers !
- Bing
- Legend
- Posts: 26514
- Joined: Sun Oct 02, 2011 7:19 pm
- Location: Exiled Scot in Maidstone
DI Vessel
Wouldn’t be without mine. Saves time as you don’t dry the car, and more importantly means you’re not dragging a cloth across the paintwork.
Current... Silver Grey ///M Roadster, non-flimper spec, Imola Red nappa, permanent ear-to-ear grin
Previous... 3.0Si Sport Roadster, Black Sapphire, Dream Red leather with lots of toys and lots of mods...
Previous... 3.0Si Sport Roadster, Black Sapphire, Dream Red leather with lots of toys and lots of mods...
- jimbo1958
- Lifer
- Posts: 6471
- Joined: Wed Jun 09, 2010 10:49 pm
- Location: Romancing Your Mum
- Bing
- Legend
- Posts: 26514
- Joined: Sun Oct 02, 2011 7:19 pm
- Location: Exiled Scot in Maidstone
DI Vessel
It basically cleans tap water - it’s full of a cleaning sand that removes all contaminants. The water that comes out has 0ppm of contaminants when you measure it with a water meter, which means you can rinse off the car, leave it to dry, and you get zero water spots. Tap is attached to one side, your hose to the ‘out’ side. Window cleaners use this sort of thing - and you can use it for that too. The sand does need to be replaced over time, but I only use it for my car, windows very occasionally, and I use a bag of resin a year, which gives about 2.5 fills and costs about £83. For the hassle, time and paint damage it saves it’s very worth it. Especially in Kent where the water is only one layer of sediment above liquid grit...
PVR has two in series. Not sure why, maybe the water that comes out actively eats dirt or something
Current... Silver Grey ///M Roadster, non-flimper spec, Imola Red nappa, permanent ear-to-ear grin
Previous... 3.0Si Sport Roadster, Black Sapphire, Dream Red leather with lots of toys and lots of mods...
Previous... 3.0Si Sport Roadster, Black Sapphire, Dream Red leather with lots of toys and lots of mods...
- buzyg
- Legend
- Posts: 26534
- Joined: Fri May 20, 2011 6:11 pm
- Location: Cornwall
DI Vessel
Well I learned something today.Bing wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 9:41 amIt basically cleans tap water - it’s full of a cleaning sand that removes all contaminants. The water that comes out has 0ppm of contaminants when you measure it with a water meter, which means you can rinse off the car, leave it to dry, and you get zero water spots. Tap is attached to one side, your hose to the ‘out’ side. Window cleaners use this sort of thing - and you can use it for that too. The sand does need to be replaced over time, but I only use it for my car, windows very occasionally, and I use a bag of resin a year, which gives about 2.5 fills and costs about £83. For the hassle, time and paint damage it saves it’s very worth it. Especially in Kent where the water is only one layer of sediment above liquid grit...
PVR has two in series. Not sure why, maybe the water that comes out actively eats dirt or something