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VCDS/OBDEleven near Chesterfield, 55 Xenon Range Basic Settigs
Bump as I've still not got this fixed and no DM responses 🙏
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VCDS/OBDEleven near Chesterfield, 55 Xenon Range Basic Settigs
Can anyone near Chesterfield let me borrow their VCDS, VAGCOM or OBDEleven for 15 minutes, I've kinda stuffed me headlamps up... Long version: after 9 years of MX-5s with lovely LED headlamps, I'm back in VAG land with a 2016 MkVII Golf GTD estate (I had a 2005 Skoda Fabia vRS beforehand, that's how I ended up on Briskoda). I found the xenon dipped beam very disappointing (borderline scary) so manually adjusted the alignment to get a more correct range. But read afterwards I was suppose to use VCDS on 55 Headlight Range Module to put the xenons into Adjustment Mode whilst messing with the allen bolt to adjust the range, then put them in Basic Setting afterwards to learn the new rest position - otherwise I risked damaging the auto levelling motors. So I tried this using Car Scanner Pro long coding to do this but it doesn't support that function and instead I wiped the headlamp basic settings entirely so now I've a permanent warning light and I've lost use of the cornering lamps (Headlights Corrector). The fix is simple, I just need to do Basic Setting with VCDS on level ground and it should be fine. I've taken a look at the VCDS map and DM'd a few people but thought I'd ask here too in case anyone has OBDEleven they can lend use of.
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Doors covered in water marks after washing
If you have one, leaf blower!
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Pads & polish
I recommend and oily diminishing polish and a medium foam pad, just be careful with heat build up in the pad, swap it periodically. VAG paint is pretty hard so anything too gentle won't make much difference! As the below are oily, you will need to clean up after with panel wipe or IPA to see how you got on. Polish one-step gentler option: Scholl S20 Black 1 Step Compound or Sonax EX 04-06 Polish more aggressive option (may need a second pass with something above to refine): Scholl S3XXL, Koch H8.02 or Meguiars Ultimate Compound Pads: At a minimum you'll want a couple of medium polishing pad but as I say, VAG paint is hard, so might need a cutting pad if the paint is bad. A pad with minimal cut for refining and application of waxes and glazes should also be hond. Chemical Guys Hex (orange then blue on hard German paint, green then black on softer Japanese paint), Scholl Spider (blue or purple, then oranges) and Meguiars Pro pads are all highly recommended. Wool and microfibre pads are more aggressive, generate more heat and more difficult to clean out whereas foam ones are a little gentler so suit beginners better. Remember to prime the pad first and spread polish across your working area (typically 2 ft x 2 ft but oily polishes will let you do upto a quarter bonnet) before whacking up the speed. Once primed you'll only need 3 pea sized blobs of polish, which should be worked until they go from milky to clear, that might take 3-4 minutes, anything more than that is probably pointless; 4+ passes (2 vertical, 2 horizontal, overlap your lines by 50%) moving at 1-2" per second across the same area, applying a little pressure and you should be good to go.
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Cleaning the inside of the windscreen, what to use.
Autoglym's Fast Glass, inside and outside. Awesome stuff. Spray on, wipe before it all flashes (ideally with a microfibre but kitchen towel will do) and it's job done.
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Best source for lint free polishing cloths etc
300gsm+ Korean edgless plush microfibres, such as: https://www.in2detailing.co.uk/products/16-x-16-plush-350gsm-yellow-korean-microfibre-edgeless-car-detailing-cloth https://www.in2detailing.co.uk/products/16-x-16-plush-400gsm-korean-edgeless-microfibre-cloth?variant=32816749117519 If you're on a budget there's these below but they do leave some fluff until they've been washed: https://www.cleanyourcar.co.uk/purestar-light-touch-buffing-pkg-5
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Cleaning Leather Seats
One thing to note with leather is it comes in many flavours. Traditional leather such as aniline or nappa will benefit from leather creams, feeding etc and is typically ungrained or only lightly embossed. The leather you get in an average non-premium brand car is not likely to be those types though, it's more likely painted and then plastic coated for more durability. Some of the trim may well be entirely synthetic. Leather creams and feed will just make coated or painted leather sticky and attract dirt since they cannot be absorbed through the plastic coating, and this dirt will wear them out quicker. However, you can be a bit more aggressive cleaning coated/painted leather and throw dilute APC at it with a soft upholstery brush, and then afterwards treat it as you would plastic; I find a solution of CarPRO PERL works well as this leaves a matt, non-greasy finish on all interior plastic and modern leather. I actually use my face degreasing wipes for cleaning my interior leather and pleather and it seems to work well.
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Bird muck
Polish makes no difference as it's used to correct defects, it doesn't leave a protective film (AIO products generally leave some protection but you'll be lucky if that lasts much beyond a month). A good wax might provide a little protection, and I expect a ceramic coating might provide a little more, but ultimately you want bird poo off ASAP (generally within 48 hours) before it eat into the clear coat because as you said that won't polish out. To remove guano, a soft cloth soaked in hot water and applied to the droppings for a little while if possible will soften it so it's easier to remove, you don't want to go in scraping it off and scratching everything. And of course, prevention is better than cure so generally avoid parking under trees where possible (also honeydew won't damage paint but it's unsightly and makes it hard to see out!)
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Scratch removal
If you have to correct yourself by hand, GTechniq P1 Nano works very well with a foam applicator. You will be at it a while though, work it in small circles with some pressure. Have a bottle of water handy to mist on it, this will reactivate the polish. As others have said, machine correction with a dual action (DA) polisher is preferable but you may not have ready access to this and the required pads and compounds. Much will depend on how deep the scratch is, if it's gone all the way through the clear coat the best you will manage is to soften the appearance of it. EDIT: Just realised this is a thread revival 🙄 Hope it worked out for you!
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Looking at DA Polishers
I was given much useful advice at https://www.briskoda.net/forums/topic/478648-daro-polishing-machine-advice/?tab=comments#comment-5548053 Specific panel wipe chemicals are available but you can use a solution of 10-20% isopropyl alcohol IPA (aka isopropanol) that's nearly as good and a lot cheaper (under £2.50/L once diluted to <20% with distilled water). 4 plush microfibres are recommended for removing the polish before going on with the IPA, the Korean Edgeless 350 gsm plush is cost effective at around £2.50 a towel, there's also Interdetailings Open Pile and Rags Edgeless 300, then flip the cloth over and go in with the IPA spray. Make sure you get all the polish out the shut lines before it bakes in, the edgeless clothes are great for this. Scholl S3XXL, Koch H8.02 or Meguiars Ultimate Compound I would recommend to do a 1 step polish on harder paint with a medium foam pad, work them until they go from milky to clear as they're oily and diminishing. The diminishing should help avoid overdoing it, again using a softer pad will reduce the cutting action too. As these are oily they will need cleaning up afterwards with panel wipe so you can see the final result. I'm not familiar with Menzerna's range so can't advise there but they have a good reputation so I'm sure you'll be fine, if they're oily make sure you panel wipe to check your results, otherwise the oils will fill/mask defects temporarily.
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Michelin pilot sport 4 s
I thought most people who lived on Dartmoor were at Her Majesty's Pleasure and thus have no access to a car 🤣
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Michelin pilot sport 4 s
I wouldn't worry too much about temperature in Devon, it doesn't that cold compared to the Peak District where I ran seversal sets of Pilot Sport 4 on a RWD car all year - yes they drop off a bit when the gritters come out but I only had serious concerns in snow and that will upset any summer tyre. I've ran other UHP summer tyres (e.g. Eagle F1 Assy 5) all year and the only model I've noticed a really rapid drop off with declining temperatures is my current Falken FK512 that seem very unhappy at anything below 10'c. The PS5 has just arrived on UK shores so there's not much feedback on it yet. The PS4S is what they fit to quite a few supercars out the factory so may not be worth the extra cash unless you've got 300 bhp going to the rear tyres... If you are worried about performance in rare light snowfall and if/when temperatures hover around zero, a recent innovation is summer-biased/UHP all-season tyres; Michelin's Pilot Sport All Season 4 comes to mind and pricing is similar to the summer PS4, if you want better snow performance then there's the 3 Peaks Mountain rated M+S Michelin Cross Climate 2. These two models seem to demand the smallest compromise in summer and wet weather performance in exchange for better grip when its colder and could comfortably be run all year in most of the UK. You want to avoid Nordic/Alpine tyres such as Nokian, they are very ice and snow focused and will not work well in Devon's mild climate. To be honest I think any true winter tyre (so not even Nordic) is overkill in Devon, you'd be best running an all-season even just for winter (as would most of England and Wales imo, given their daily mean in Jan/Feb is still above 3'c).
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General methods used to clean ??
The final result is very dependent on prep beforehand, to make it look shiny it needs polishing to the surface is glass smooth before you go on with waxes. Glaze is a bit of a cheat since it fills in defects rather than permanently correcting them, you get the results a lot quicker but they do wash out! I forgot to mention if you really want black to pop, Poorboys Blackhole show glaze is something of a go to for anyone interested in detailing, great results but longevity is pants outdoors it soon washes off. Autoglym SRP always gets a mention since it goes on very well with hand application, it's an All-In-One (AIO) so very similar to a glaze. There's Autofinesse Tripple too, I have no experience of that but people seem to rate it. With those two AIOs, they will last better if topped with a durable wax, I think that King of Gloss Dark would probably fit the bill but so would the 845 and spray ceramics I mentioned.
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General methods used to clean ??
I run my pressure washer on max (it isn't adjustable anyway), but it is only a 110 bar machine (previously used 140 bar on my Fabia vRS though). The choice of nozzle and how you use it is more important. I have a low pressure nozzle that I use for the MX-5's mohair/canvas roof, everything else gets the normal fan jet at full whack. Wasn't familiar with Fusso King of Gloss wax but what I've read of it would not sway me away from my current wax of choice, Collinite 845 (which is an easier to use version of Collinite 476S that King of Gloss is often compared to). I'm all about the easy life and longevity, so once I'm out of 845 I'll probably switch to a spray ceramic.
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So Much for buying British !
Avon aren't British, haven't been for decades. The factory at Melksham stopped producing car tyres in 2018, they just do motorcycle and race tyres. The brand is currently owned by Cooper (USA), who in turn are owned by an Apollo (India) which have many factories across the globe. I think Goodyear had a go at buying Cooper, so it might be American again by now. Your tyre was probably made in the Far East, as with most budget and mid-range tyres.