I've been on the trail for a few years , and have always been amazed at the how clean the Jeeps and Toyota's are. How do they manage it? As we all know , the cars must be washed at each stop. Around 400 litres with a hose. Some do twice a day.
The ACB says that around 11.78 million days a year are used by us. I did a quick calculation. -
That's - 4 billion- 800 million litres per annum. That is substantially more than Adani will use in 5 years.
Are we aware of how much water it takes , to " keep up appearances"? Maybe- if we washed our cars every 3rd day , we could make a difference. Just a thought....
Mark
( he's that bloke with the dirty Patrol). :)
Many commercial car washes use far less than home car washes so your estimate is wobbly to begin. I pressure wash with two half buckets for sudsy stuff and rinsing clothes/sponges and I use no where near 400 litres (in fact, few years back I used to draw water from a bucket with the pressure washer and there's no way I changed buckets 30 times). At two times a year, I reckon my Toyota needs a lot less water than the cups of coffee of Adani offices.
I agree that certainly we have to be careful with our water, but I wonder where you get your figures from.
400 litres for a car wash appears to be exceedingly high. I haven't done it to time it, but do you realise how long a hose would need to be on to fill 2 of the old 44 gallon (205 litre) drums. I can honestly say I have never seen anyone wash a car with the hose running that long. Then the assertion that we all wash the car every day while travelling. Once again, sorry but in the last 10 years of travelling, I have only ever seen one person clean their car every day, and I would not see more than 2% or 3% of the people clean their cars at all. As for myself, the poor old Cruiser gets to see the hose a couple of times a year, when I fill my bucket, and hose it off. I would use no more than 50 litres for the whole process.
So, again, I wonder where your figures come from, but agree wholeheartedly that we really should question whether the car needs a clean for "appearances" sake, when we travel, especially in remote areas.
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Regards Ian
Chaos, mayhem, confusion. Good my job here is done
I've been on the trail for a few years , and have always been amazed at the how clean the Jeeps and Toyota's are. How do they manage it? As we all know , the cars must be washed at each stop. Around 400 litres with a hose. Some do twice a day. The ACB says that around 11.78 million days a year are used by us. I did a quick calculation. - That's - 4 billion- 800 million litres per annum. That is substantially more than Adani will use in 5 years. Are we aware of how much water it takes , to " keep up appearances"? Maybe- if we washed our cars every 3rd day , we could make a difference. Just a thought.... Mark ( he's that bloke with the dirty Patrol). :)
Still no idea what you are talking about 'each stop', Car yards wash their cars each day, in some sensitive die-back forest ares vehicles have to be washed before entering. Some caravan parks only allow you to wash with a bucket.
Water is a precious commodity, everyone has to be careful, washing machines and dishwashers chew through it too.
I only wash mine when it's really dirty, probably every couple of months.
Santa wrote:400 litres = 2 x 44 gallon drums, don't think so.
There is a calculator with converter functions on your computer. Use it to check things like that. The one my Win 10 tells m that a 44 gallon drum holds approximately 200.028 litres. (Don't forget to use UK and not US gallons, we use imperial dimensions, not Yankee ones.)
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PeterD Nissan Navara D23 diesel auto, Spaceland pop-top Retired radio and electronics technician. NSW Central Coast.
Santa wrote:400 litres = 2 x 44 gallon drums, don't think so.
There is a calculator with converter functions on your computer. Use it to check things like that. The one my Win 10 tells m that a 44 gallon drum holds approximately 200.028 litres. (Don't forget to use UK and not US gallons, we use imperial dimensions, not Yankee ones.)
I guess this was in jest, we're talking about a difference of 280 ml, that's a little over the size of a small iced coffee.