I have to preface this with basic info. I'm a hobbyist and by no means a professional. I recently had the chance to borrow a friends Metro Master Blaster (MB3-CD) and couldn't wait to use it after hearing all of the hype. I had been debating on buying one for a few months so now i had the opportunity to test one out. I brought it to work with me since i knew I would have two giant vehicles to practice on. Simple to use, flip two switches and you are off to the races. The test vehicle was rather large..... It was a fire truck. After playing with it for a few minutes and blowing random objects around such as leaves, dirt, small pieces of gym equipment and the rookies hat, it was time to put it to work.
The truck was washed with cheap hand soap and a big "soft" brush. It was rinsed with non de-ionized bacteria infused crud called "city water". 2 guys started drying the drivers side of the truck with low quality hospital terry cloth towels and I started on the passenger side with the metro blaster. It took all of about 1 minute before I realized that unless you have a garage queen that has flawless paint and you are afraid of oxygen marring the paint in a weak breeze, this thing seems like a huge waste of money. Yes it put out a lot of air at a high velocity, but I found that it did not do a very good job blowing the water off of the vehicle. It seemed to take much more time to constantly chase the small water drops around after the air hit it. I will say that it works awesome for nooks and crannies and anywhere that water thinks it can hide. I'm sure for a small compact vehicle with a good coat of wax or sealant the metro master blaster would probably do a great job. I just found that with a quality drying towel, the time spent can be dramatically cut in half. I'm obviously not too worried about swirls and scratches in a daily driver and the money saved on spending $400 on a metro blaster can buy me lots of Guzzlers and maybe the 4hp model just for the tight areas. The 2 guys dried the drivers side in about 5 minutes and it took me about 20 to do the other side. I found it worked very well in drying the tires. It seemed that the heated air from the metro blaster sped up drying time tremendously.
I also found that it actually left a fair amount of a haze afterward. It was almost like a very fine film of deposits left by using crappy water.
For somebody who has a high quality whip and doesn't mind spending some time chasing small water droplets around I'd say this would be great for you.
Overall I was not impressed in the least and cannot see myself spending so much money for a mediocre product. Call me crazy.
The truck was washed with cheap hand soap and a big "soft" brush. It was rinsed with non de-ionized bacteria infused crud called "city water". 2 guys started drying the drivers side of the truck with low quality hospital terry cloth towels and I started on the passenger side with the metro blaster. It took all of about 1 minute before I realized that unless you have a garage queen that has flawless paint and you are afraid of oxygen marring the paint in a weak breeze, this thing seems like a huge waste of money. Yes it put out a lot of air at a high velocity, but I found that it did not do a very good job blowing the water off of the vehicle. It seemed to take much more time to constantly chase the small water drops around after the air hit it. I will say that it works awesome for nooks and crannies and anywhere that water thinks it can hide. I'm sure for a small compact vehicle with a good coat of wax or sealant the metro master blaster would probably do a great job. I just found that with a quality drying towel, the time spent can be dramatically cut in half. I'm obviously not too worried about swirls and scratches in a daily driver and the money saved on spending $400 on a metro blaster can buy me lots of Guzzlers and maybe the 4hp model just for the tight areas. The 2 guys dried the drivers side in about 5 minutes and it took me about 20 to do the other side. I found it worked very well in drying the tires. It seemed that the heated air from the metro blaster sped up drying time tremendously.
I also found that it actually left a fair amount of a haze afterward. It was almost like a very fine film of deposits left by using crappy water.
For somebody who has a high quality whip and doesn't mind spending some time chasing small water droplets around I'd say this would be great for you.
Overall I was not impressed in the least and cannot see myself spending so much money for a mediocre product. Call me crazy.