Kirsty, to make your life easier just buy pre-mix, then it should be fine.
Kirsty, to make your life easier just buy pre-mix, then it should be fine.
And finally, a handy hint. Find one of those plastic water bottles with a 'sports top' (the pull up or flip up tops). Very clearly label it as screenwash, and fill it with a mix of screenwash and water. Keep it in the house overnight and put it in the car each day, taking it into the house again at night. Then, if the car's washers are still frozen, you can open the window and squirt water from the bottle onto the screen (best when stationary, he adds, just in case). Worked a treat for me last winter on the days the washer bottle did freeze...
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I love these replies - 'take the bottle off'. Has anyone who suggested this actually tried it? (its accessed from under the wheel arch, so, jack car up, remove wheel arch liner, then access possible to the bottle, bolted or even riveted on, etc...)
If anyone is interested, Lidl are selling some screenwash [ignore the 'Antifreeze' label] which states it will protect down to -60C in undiluted form:
Go to a tropical fish shop. Buy a few feet of airline tubing (same diameter as screen washer tubing but cheaper) and a couple of connectors. Use that to splice into the existing washer tube but coil the excess tube round a convenient cooling system hose.The problem usually is, its not the bottle that freezes up its the washer jets they get iced up due to the very cold air hitting them as you drive along. The position of the washer jets on the panda doesn't give them a chance to stay warm from the engine ,If they were positioned on the bonnet the heat of the engine would keep them warmer so there would be less chance of them icing up.
Cant think of a solution at the moment sorry.
thanks for taking time to reply (everyone) i do have one of them sports bottles to put it in iv had it since last winter it stays in my boot and i have no trouble at all doing it thanks for that anyway! i drove for 2 hours on motorway last week and it didnt defrost then, really its my own fault as i had to stop on services to fill it up and just used water and now im suffering for it! its just this stupid weather!!I love these replies - 'take the bottle off'. Has anyone who suggested this actually tried it? (its accessed from under the wheel arch, so, jack car up, remove wheel arch liner, then access possible to the bottle, bolted or even riveted on, etc...)
And, if the bottle is frozen solid, not much heat from engine while driving is likely to reach it during a drive, unless you go a very long way (cold air from under the car is more likely to get there first)
The suggestion to go shopping is not actually that daft - get car good and warm then park in the centre part of a multistorey (away from the colder air at the edges) and it may just work. But, once its defrosted, you then need to make room to add a good dose of undiluted screenwash (try washing the windscreen lots in that car park and take the concentrate with you to fill up while you are still parked)
As to screenwash -- most 'normal' screenwash is designed for summer and offers little protection. Even if the bottle is protected to minus 5, the jets will still freeze over. Look for 'double concentrate' or 'extreme winter' grades (and not the ready-mixed sort). Used neat that will protect to Siberian temperatures. Mine is 1 part wash to 3 or 4 parts water at present and is working well in Hertfordshire's cold weather, but it's only been down to minus 8 and still no snow :-(
And finally, a handy hint. Find one of those plastic water bottles with a 'sports top' (the pull up or flip up tops). Very clearly label it as screenwash, and fill it with a mix of screenwash and water. Keep it in the house overnight and put it in the car each day, taking it into the house again at night. Then, if the car's washers are still frozen, you can open the window and squirt water from the bottle onto the screen (best when stationary, he adds, just in case). Worked a treat for me last winter on the days the washer bottle did freeze...
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thanks for taking time to reply (everyone) i do have one of them sports bottles to put it in iv had it since last winter it stays in my boot and i have no trouble at all doing it thanks for that anyway! i drove for 2 hours on motorway last week and it didnt defrost then, really its my own fault as i had to stop on services to fill it up and just used water and now im suffering for it! its just this stupid weather!!
Not to be funny but are you saying that you don't have a big coke bottle or 5 little bottle of ready mixed screenwash in the car with you during the winter at all times?
I find it strange that your washer bottle is still frozen after being in a warm engine bay for so long. Are you sure the jets are not blocked/frozen? This seems more likely. I'm assuming you press for screen wash, hear the motor whine and nothing comes out?
I know you said it's not meant to make her feel bad so fair enough on that, but so what if she doesn't carry screenwash in the car with herI carry round a massive undiluted bottle of screenwash in my car but i'd say i'm the exeption rather than the rule.
When the weather is like this everyone should be carrying a decent sized bottle of screenwash and some concentrate if possible.
I'll take that as a complimentIf you aren't a Scout leader, join up now. They love that sort of chat.
My grandad (who used to live in County Durham) used to do this in the winter: mix of water and meths, and a drop or two of washing up liquid. Basically, this is all 'commercial' screenwash is anyway (except they tend to use isopropyl alcohol instead of meths). I've never done the maths to see which is cheaper - the meths mix, or Holts double concentrate from Costco (where I buy it from)mix some methalated spirit in to your water bottel this will stop them freezing up