What You'll Learn
Aussie Conditions
Look, we've all been there after a big trip up the coast or out to the red centre. Your car looks alright from a distance, but your snorkel is caked in bug guts and your roof rack has enough red dust in the channels to start a brick factory. This guide is for the blokes and ladies who want their gear to actually last. I'm going to show you how to deep clean these bits properly without scratching your paint or drying out your plastics.
Why Bother with the High Bits?
The Gear You'll Actually Need
What You'll Need
Prep Work (Don't skip this)
Park in the shade
Never, ever wash a roof rack in the direct sun. The powder coat gets hot enough to fry an egg, and your soap will dry instantly, leaving nasty streaks. Wait for the arvo or do it under a carport.
Check your seals
Before you spray any water, check the snorkel entry point into the guard. If the sealant is cracked, be careful with the hose. You don't want water sitting inside your guard panel.
Remove the accessories
If you've got recovery boards, shovels, or awnings attached, take 'em off. You can't clean under them properly while they're mounted, and salt loves to hide in those gaps.
The 'Thump' Test
Give the rack a good shake. If it's wobbling, tighten the mounts now. Cleaning involves a bit of elbow grease, and you don't want a loose rack shifting while you're scrubbing.
Pre-rinse the whole car
Get the bulk of the loose dust off the roof and snorkel first. Use a low-pressure rinse to avoid pushing grit deeper into the seals.
While you're here...
The Step-by-Step Deep Clean
Soak the snorkel head
Spray your bug remover onto the snorkel intake and the front-facing tube. Let it dwell for 3-5 minutes, but don't let it dry. This softens up the organic matter (bugs) that's basically been kiln-fired by the sun.
Detail the snorkel grille
Use your small brush and soapy water to get into the slats of the snorkel head. This is where spiders love to hide, and where dust builds up. Scrub gently in a circular motion.
The 'Under-Rack' Rinse
Using your long-reach brush or a bent hose attachment, get under the roof rack. This is the 'dead zone' where leaves and salt accumulate. It's often the first place a roof starts to rust.
APC the T-Channels
Spray your diluted APC into the channels of the roof rack. These channels hold red dust like nothing else. Use a stiff detailing brush to agitate the dirt out of the corners.
Scrub the snorkel body
Use your wash mitt and plenty of soap on the main tube. If it feels rough even after washing, that's where the clay bar comes in. Run the clay over the plastic to pull out the embedded grit.
Clean the rack slats
Wash each slat of the rack individually. I usually start from the front and work back. Don't forget the underside of the slats, salt spray loves to sit there out of sight.
Rinse thoroughly
Rinse from the top down. Make sure you're flushing all the soap out of the snorkel's water drain holes (those little slits at the bottom of the head).
Dry the high spots
Use your leaf blower or compressed air to blast water out of the rack's bolt holes and channels. If you don't, you'll get 'weeping' streaks down your windows as soon as you start driving.
The 'Microfiber Wipe'
Take your drying towel and wipe down the snorkel and rack. Check for any missed spots or 'ghosting' from old mud.
Treat the snorkel plastic
Apply your plastic protectant. If the snorkel is starting to grey, use Solution Finish. If it's still healthy, a coat of 303 Aerospace will keep the UV from killing it. Apply with a foam applicator and buff off the excess.
Protect the powder coat
If you've got a metal rack, I reckon a quick spray sealant like Gtechniq C2V3 is the go. It makes the surface slick so the next lot of dust just blows off.
Check the rubber seals
Apply a bit of rubber conditioner to the gaskets where the rack meets the roof. It stops them from perishing and keeps the water out.
The Old 'Bat Dropping' Trick
Watch Out
Going the Extra Mile: Advanced Tips
What's in my Kit?
Keeping it Clean
Common Questions from the Workshop
Can I use a heat gun to restore my faded snorkel?
How do I get red dust out of the T-channels?
My roof rack is whistling after I cleaned it. Why?
Is it safe to use a pressure washer on my awning?
Should I wax my snorkel?
What's the best way to remove tree sap?
How often should I tighten my roof rack bolts?
Can salt spray really damage aluminium racks?
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