I have seen lots of, "Streaked Window" posts here and thought I would share my secret of TOTALLY STREAK FREE windows for your car. I have won many 1st Place ribbons in Concour level events with our 1982 Porsche 911 with this method. Here is the trick: In a clean bucket, fill with hot water. Not hot enough to scald your hands, but HOT. Be Careful!!! Using a terrycloth rag, get it wet and rinse all the excess water out. While it is still steamy, go after the window. Before it dries, follow up with another dry terrycloth rag and buff or polish till dry. Thats it. NO CHEMICALS, NO NEWSPAPERS, NO STREAKS! A word on rags....... I have a supply of car rags that are "car only". They are bulk purchase, 100% cotton terrycloth towels from big box retailers. About 12" x 18" in size. Wash them in HOT water with little laundry soap - about 1/2 of what you would normally use. NEVER use fabric softener. It leaves a residue in the cloth that causes STREAKS. NEVER use dryer sheets either. That's it. Hope this helps out.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Prius The First @ Nov 23 2006, 08:54 AM) [snapback]353439[/snapback]</div> What's a terrycloth?
A cotton mini-towel. In the US, the texture of a bath towel is called terrycloth, with its many tiny little loops of cotton thread.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Oxo @ Nov 23 2006, 07:43 AM) [snapback]353473[/snapback]</div> terrycloth n : a pile fabric (usually cotton) with uncut loops on both sides; used to make bath towels and bath robes [syn: terry, terry cloth]
The best glass cleaning cloth is a surgical towel. They are very tightly woven to be 100% lint free so lint is not left in surgical wounds. Ask a surgical nurse or a hospital materials manager if they have any old surgical towels to discard (after they have been cleaned and sterilzed, of coruse). You could perhaps order them on a surgical supply site also.
I'll stick with windex and newspaper. I haven't had any streaking problem and the papers keep showing up on my driveway, so I might as well do something with them before I recycle them.
Darell's way: Dry glass-specific microfiber towel, followed by a used-up-should-be-discarded dryer sheet. The second step is only when it want it to REALLY sparkle. Typically I only use dray microfiber, and I simply never have streaks. Never tried hot, steamy water before. I can see how it would work though. Thanks for the tip.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Prius The First @ Nov 23 2006, 08:54 AM) [snapback]353439[/snapback]</div> How do you get to the corners of the inside of the windshield?
On Queer Eye for the Straight Guy they recommended using coffee filter paper with glass cleaner to avoid streaks. I haven't yet tried that one myself.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(narf @ Nov 24 2006, 10:50 AM) [snapback]353686[/snapback]</div> Not sure about where you live, but the Winnipeg Free Press and Winnipeg Sun use a lot of Soy ink in their production. Your hands get smeary just reading the newspaper. I would never try cleaning any surface with it, though I will use the paper - especially the Winnipeg Sun! - to put under my cat's litter box.