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Video: Safely Removing Snow and Ice

01:39 min
By Cars.com Editors
February 17, 2017

About the video

Do you clear snow and ice off of your car with a shovel or broom? You could be damaging your car and not know it. Cars.com’s Matt Schmitz provides tips on how to get the snow off of your car while preserving its paint job.

Transcript

(upbeat music) You wouldn't shave your face with a sling blade, or take off your makeup with sandpaper.
So what in the Winter Wonderland would possess you to remove snow from your car with a shovel? We've seen paint jobs that run up to $15,000 on exotic sports cars. But even if you've long since soured on your Wagon Queen Family Truckster's metallic pea paint, no car is going to improve its appearance with dents, dings, or tell tail brushstrokes etched into its profile permanently. Here's some tips to help you avoid shaming your car with a snow-clearing scarlet letter. First, get the right tool for the job. Shovels, household brooms, and stiff bristle brushes will damage your paint. Instead, order a good foam brush with a non-abrasive, freeze-resistant, polyethylene head covering a recessed, hard-plastic scraper, along with a telescoping handle. Use the brush to pull, not push, the snow off your car. No foam brush handy? Take a hands-on approach. Pull on some leather gloves and push the snow off manually. Your reach will be more limited, but at least you won't damage your paint. For a frosted-over windshield and windows, consider using a brass blade scraper. It's a treacherous looking tool, but your car's glass is plenty hard to withstand the scraping unscathed. Resist the urge to remove every last bit of snow, and instead let your car warm up so the heat from your defroster and engine take care of the nooks and crannies. Whichever approach you take, be sure to remove large piles of snow from your car, instead of letting the wind do your dirty work for you at the peril of those behind you. We know you're special snowflake, but that's just cold. (upbeat music)