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Exterior Care beginner 4 min read

Pro Exterior Detailing Tips For The Aussie Driveway

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Is your paint looking a bit flat after a rough Australian summer? Here is how to get a professional finish at home without spending a fortune on gear you don't need.

D"M
Dave "Davo" Mitchell Off-Road & 4WD Specialist
| Updated: 2 March 2026
Pro Exterior Detailing Tips For The Aussie Driveway

Aussie Conditions

Australian conditions are tougher than most—intense UV, red dust, coastal salt, and 40°C summers. European car care advice often doesn't cut it here.
Quick Summary

Look, we've all been there, you spend three hours washing the car only for it to look 'just okay'. This guide is for the weekend warrior who wants that showroom deep-gloss look. I'm going to show you a few pro tricks I use in my own shop to handle everything from baked-on bug guts to that annoying red dust that gets everywhere.

01

Stop Wasting Your Saturday

Right, so most blokes reckon a bucket of soapy water and an old sponge is enough. Truth be told, if you're still using that yellow sponge from the servo, you're basically rubbing sandpaper on your paint. With the Aussie sun beating down, especially coming out of a scorching summer, your clear coat is under massive stress. If you want that deep shine, you've gotta change your process, not just your soap.

The Two-Bucket Method is Non-Negotiable

I learned this the hard way when I swirled the living daylights out of a black Commodore back in the day. Use one bucket for your soapy suds and one with plain water to rinse your mitt. Every time you wipe the car, rinse the dirt off in the plain water first. It stops you from rubbing the grit back onto the paint. Simple, but it'll save you a fortune in paint correction later.

Dealing with 'Concrete' Bird Droppings

If you've parked under a gum tree and come back to a bat dropping that's baked hard in 40-degree heat, don't scrub it! You'll scratch the clear coat instantly. I always tell my customers to soak a microfiber towel in warm water, lay it over the 'deposit' for five minutes, and let it soften. It'll slide right off. My go-to for the stubborn bits is Bowden's Own Bug & Tar, stuff works wonders on those kamikaze locusts you get out west too.

The 'Baggy Test' for Your Paint

After you wash and dry the car, put your hand inside a plastic sandwich bag and run it over the bonnet. If it feels like sandpaper, you've got bonded contaminants like fallout or red dust. Honestly, I wouldn't bother with a heavy compound yet. Just use a clay bar or a clay mitt with plenty of lubricant. It'll make the paint feel smooth as glass (your partner will thank you when they see the shine).

Seal it or Lose it

In our UV conditions, a basic wax lasts about three weeks before the sun kills it. I reckon for most people, a ceramic spray sealant like Gtechniq C2 or Meguiar's Hybrid Ceramic is the way to go. It's dead easy, spray on, wipe off. It'll actually stand up to the salt spray if you're living near the coast, and it makes the next wash ten times easier because the dirt won't stick.
02

The 'No-Nonsense' Gear List

What You'll Need

0/5
Microfiber Wash Mitt — Chuck the sponges in the bin, seriously.
Two 15L Buckets — One for soap, one for rinsing.
Large Microfiber Drying Towel — Chamois (shammy) are old school and can drag dirt.
PH Neutral Car Wash — Avoid dish soap, it strips your protection faster than a coastal gale.
Ceramic Spray Sealant — Your best defence against the Aussie sun.

Watch Out

Never, and I mean NEVER, wash your car in direct sunlight when the panels are hot to the touch. The water and soap will dry instantly, leaving spots that are a nightmare to get off. Also, don't use the same brush the servo provides for their truck wash on your car, those things are full of rocks from the last bloke's 4WD.
03

Quick Questions

How often should I actually wash it?
If it's a daily driver, once a fortnight is the sweet spot. If you've been to the beach, do the underbody and exterior that same arvo to get the salt off.
Can I use a pressure washer?
Yeah, no dramas. Just don't get the nozzle too close to the paint or any rubber seals, especially on older cars. Keep it about 30cm back.
Is ceramic coating worth the money?
If you're keeping the car for more than 3 years, absolutely. But for a weekend project, these new ceramic sprays get you 80% of the result for a fraction of the cost.

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