I hear crybabies all day long on the cb radio when the salt shakers are doing their job. But I'd starve to death or go broke if they were not out here for the travelling public and us die hard old hands.
I hear crybabies all day long on the cb radio when the salt shakers are doing their job. But I'd starve to death or go broke if they were not out here for the travelling public and us die hard old hands.
That's because for a lot of them it means they have to wash their cars instead of letting them go for months without touching them.
Instead of just getting in going to work, get in go home park it and forget about it until tomorrow then repeat... I mean heaven forbid they have to do something other than drive it and put gas in it and maybe pay someone to change the oil once in while..
And the only wax it might see is at the Coin OP if it's really lucky....
Think about it...
Here in the local paper they actually had an article on people using the car washes they were so busy and the lines were so long.....
That should tell people something..... About what's not usually happening....
Occasionally during the extremely high tides in the fall, ocean water comes back through the storm drains in Miami Beach and floods some of the roads, thats as close to salt on the roads we will ever see here.
The trade off is 110 for 3, maybe 4 months. It's so hot, you literally can't touch the metal. Your car dries in about 3-5 minutes. I can't even was a panel without having to go over the truck to keep it wet.