Ross,
Best product I have found for reducing fog is ordinary dishwashing
liquid.
Put a drop on a finger-sized spot of moist dishcloth, then spread it
around the glass. Let it dry, then buff off the haze. It takes a lot
of buffing to get the haze removed.
Bob
On Wed, 13 Jan 1999 23:23:01 -0800 (PST) Ross MacPherson
<arm@bc.sympatico.ca> writes:
>At 10:02 AM 1/12/99 GMT, Nevin wrote:
>
>> With RainX, I've also never found wipers necessary on the highway,
>and in
>>most cases, at any speed, unless it's REALLY raining. Snow is another
>>story. The other stuff they make, FogX, doesn't seem to be worth the
>bottle
>>in which it's sold.
>>
>
>And then Bud pointed out that no T series owner would be without it.
>I
>heartily agree with both. While out in the TC acouple weeks ago I
>was
>caught in heavy traffic and someswerious rain. The outside of the
>windscreen stayed nice and clear but the inside was completely fogged
>over.
>I stopped and applied Fog-X several timeas and it just simply didn't
>work at
>all. Since REAL roadsters don't muck about with sissy-frills like
>de-misters, heaters, roll-up windows, turn signals and occasionally
>brakes,
>I've become used to wiping the inside of the windscreen with a cloth
>while
>shifting with the wrong hand and signalling from the wrong side as
>well as
>an assortment of other feats of ambidextrosity (!?) It would be kind
>of nice
>to reduce my multitasking by finding something that will eliminate the
>fog
>on the windscreen. Anybody got any recommendations? Let me rephrase
>that....Anybody got any product recommendations?
>
>Cheers,
>
>
>Ross MacPherson
>TC-3528 , `66 BGT, NEMGT - #11849
>Surrey, BC, Canada
>
>
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