inkey$ said:
Thanks all. So what do we define as long term use vs condensation/potential damage? Are we thinking its better to remove say a month at a time, let the car and cover breathe?
The longest period that I left my Stormforce cover on for was 6 months while I was doing some consulting work in Hamburg. I was led to believe that I would be able to do 30-35-hour weeks so planned to work 9 hours/day and take Fri-Sun off to come back to NL. It didn't quite work out like that however and I only managed to get back for 2 weekends during the whole time. Grr.
Anyway, a long-winded way of explaining how the cover ended up being left on. I took a peek under the cover on those 2 weekends to check everything was ok and the only thing I saw that was anything like detrimental was some faint marks on the bonnet where condensation had been concentrated and then evaporated. Easily removed with the first wash/polish when the cover finally came off.
If you realise that you're not actually hermetically sealing the car with a car-cover. It's not like you're going to have a mouldy bacon butty in a plastic ziploc bag that you forgot about! The whole underside of the car isn't covered of course and there are gaps around the wheel arches where air will pass and then circulate around on the inside of the cover, so it will never be subject to permanent humidty/condensate. In a light breeze you can see it balloon up a bit so that's a good indication that air is getting in underneath.
I noticed a few occasions where the Stormforce cover had actually dried out completely before I had expected it to and it's nowhere near anything like a soggy wet rag that people assume it will be!
Put it this way- any fear of condensation cycles and slight rubbing are massively offset by the potential damage UV rays and birdsh!t will do without a cover in place.
We have duckies around here who obviously eat at the local trattoria, evident by some of the huge steaming piles of poop they leave behind.
One looked like it was taking aim at the zed and left a 3 ft trail of sheer horror from the middle of the roof towards the rear and onto the road. It was a true spectacle and actually quite impressive if I'm totally honest. I had no idea they could be so prolific with their bowel movements! :lol:
In any case, the cover saved me from a lengthy cleanup of the hood and bootlid. A jet wash dispatched the remnants of the duck doody easily. I'm just glad I was around to deal with it when it happened. Imagine how that would have baked on to the fabric roof if left for 6 months during summer. Eek.
