Review Chemical Guys air blower

pvr

Dutch
 Ruler of the South East UK
I received the air blower on friday, so gave it a test over the weekend once I replaced the US plug with the 110V plug that fits in my transformer.

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First impressions.

The unit is light and easy to handle. It sure blows out a lot of air and for £25 delivered, feels like good value for money. You have to have a 110V transformer though (which I have for my Porter Cable) and you need a new plug (Screwfix - £1.20). It is a two core cable, where the black core is the Live cable, the white core the Neutral one. Using the Screwfix connector, it is less then 5 minutes work to replace the existing US plug.

Having washed the car, I tried the dryer. The unit is not suitable to dry the entire car, it just takes too long and I would not have the patience for that. Now for the good points: Once I dried the car using the normal towel method, I used this unit to blow all around the bumber, petrol filler, mirrors, wheels etc. Now that was working great, it removed all that water in no time what so ever.

Using the towal in one hand, the blower in the other, it cleared the "hidden" areas of water in not time, and whilst it pushes it on the paintwork, you could use the towel from your other hand to mop it up before it runs all over the place.

What I liked:

It always annoys me that there is water behind the license plate, mirrors etc etc and when you move the car, it runs out. With this light unit, no more of this. Also, as I cleared the wheels of all water, there was no surface rust on the discs the next morning as they were dry when I parked the car (normally they are obviously wet).

It also highlighted the areas that I had missed during the washing. As I did not touch the wheels for example, I could see bits that I had missed. Normally, when using a towel you would move the dirt around and possibly scratch. The same is true from the hinge areas etc which shows then if you have missed a bit during the washing. It also removed water from difficult areas such as around badges/ grills etc.

The fact that you can dry areas quickly is also helpful when washing for example my classic Golf MKI cabriolet, which goes straight back in the garage after a wash. I must prefer to think of the car to be completely dry in all sort of hidden areas then to naturally dry - with possible issues of rust (1993 car).

The soft rubber hose is safe for paintwork, and as it has a small opening, you can really aim the air flow very well. You would not want a big blower as this would blow all the dust from the floor onto the car.

What I did not like:

The far too short lead that is supplied with the unit. I will replace that with a longer one as it is a pain to have a short lead. US power (110v) is a bit of a pain of course.

Would I recommend it?

Well, if you know that you can not dry an entire car with it, and you just want to use it to dry the annoying bits, then yes. But you have to have a 110V transformer though, and to just buy a transformer for this unit - probably not worth it just for that.
 
Hi,

So you got this on the group buy off Detailing world?

Must admit i was tempted but by the sound of it its not really upto what everyone was hoping.

Good to hear the report as it has defo made my mind up about whether to ge one.

Cheers

PaulN
 
yes, I think you were the one that pointed me in that direction in the first place.

So - does that mean you want one or you don't want one :D
 
pvr said:
yes, I think you were the one that pointed me in that direction in the first place.

So - does that mean you want one or you don't want one :D

lol Dont want one but i didn't want to say that on your thread...... sorry.

If you could blow a car dry at that size and weight i would snap it up.

Cheers

PaulN
 
For £25 I did not really care that much to be honest. As I said, it is not a car dryer - it is more a finishing type product.

Should work great for the Barbeque as well :D
 
I have been thinking about getting one of these from Makita for $120 US for that purpose.
Can also be used as a vacuum. Does anyone have one of these?
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I've contemplated using my leafblower to dry the car, but I have a feeling that my neighbours will be looking at me weird for doing it. :lol:

Instead, I'll sheet water over the car as I'm done washing so as to minimize water droplets. I find it works well.
 
My favorite is using an Air Wand attachment on my Weed Eater leaf blower. My neighbors already know I am nuts so they don't even glance up anymore when the leaf blower gets fired up at the end of my car wash jobs anymore.

Works great :thumbsup:
 
AlanL, your neighbors think your nuts?

I am the talk of the community. Rinsing the car off at 0600, just to go to work..... :oops:

My wife is on the Community Association, and when she goes to the meetings, there is always a jab bout me and the car....
She did silence them once with this comment: Your year old S class Mercedes does not look as good as my husbands 12 year old truck....... could have heard a pin drop..... :evil:
 
Do you get dust from the floor spray back up the car again? I found that when blowing near the wheels that I started to get dust on the lower part of the car
 
My garage floor is graded and is covered by 2 channeled rubber/vinyl mats so the water runs off with all the crud I just washed off the car (I have softened <potassiim> water tapped into the garage as well)= nothing gets splashed/blown back onto the car.
 
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