oldmodman
New member
- Sep 25, 2007
- 2,563
- 0
I hate dust.
And a QD generally resulted in a clean, but micro-marred finish.
So I tried something else.
I grounded my car. Both while working on the paint and while it is parked in the garage.
I drilled a half inch hole through my garage floor in the back corner where it would be out of the way. Drove a four foot copper rod down into the hole and sealed the top of the hole with bolt setting epoxy. Then bolted a couple of long copper grounding brushes to it with copper welding ground clamps to the ends.
And it worked! I can now keep the car parked for several weeks without the damn dust jacket showing up the morning after I polish or wax.
I don't know how grounding the car will affect thing like your computer blowing up in a lightning storm, or long term metal corrosion. But for right now I am happy that I don't have to immediately cover the car as soon as I roll it into the garage.
And a QD generally resulted in a clean, but micro-marred finish.
So I tried something else.
I grounded my car. Both while working on the paint and while it is parked in the garage.
I drilled a half inch hole through my garage floor in the back corner where it would be out of the way. Drove a four foot copper rod down into the hole and sealed the top of the hole with bolt setting epoxy. Then bolted a couple of long copper grounding brushes to it with copper welding ground clamps to the ends.
And it worked! I can now keep the car parked for several weeks without the damn dust jacket showing up the morning after I polish or wax.
I don't know how grounding the car will affect thing like your computer blowing up in a lightning storm, or long term metal corrosion. But for right now I am happy that I don't have to immediately cover the car as soon as I roll it into the garage.