PDA

View Full Version : What's the best stuff for the visor?



Dooly
2nd May 2008, 08:08
I think I've seen some stuff you wipe on visors that makes the rain run off so you can see.
Any suggestions?

kiwifruit
2nd May 2008, 08:10
Plexus or pledge

Subike
2nd May 2008, 08:25
give your visor a good clean in hot dishwash water, I use Palmolive,
then spray with pledge, lightly. Works a treat!
Remove visor from helmet first!

Katman
2nd May 2008, 08:26
Nikwax do a spray called Visor Proof.

Mikkel
2nd May 2008, 08:35
Plexus. 10 chars.

Gubb
2nd May 2008, 08:39
Catcrap.

10 chars.

Hitcher
2nd May 2008, 08:46
Pledge is superior to Plexus for water beading and run-off in the wet. It also smells nicer.

fergie
2nd May 2008, 08:47
rain x from repco

Rosie
2nd May 2008, 08:49
Nikwax do a spray called Visor Proof.

:niceone: Visor proof is good stuff.

avgas
2nd May 2008, 09:13
windscreen wiper on the glove - no point in reinventing the wheel

Dooly
2nd May 2008, 09:15
Thanks for the advice guys.
Looks like I can sort it no probs now.

Ragingrob
2nd May 2008, 09:45
Where does one find "pledge" or "visor proof"? Bike shops?

Hitcher
2nd May 2008, 09:54
You will find Pledge in the cleaning products section of your supermarket. The orange-scented one is rather pleasant.

georgie
2nd May 2008, 09:55
Where does one find "pledge" or "visor proof"? Bike shops?

Erm, not sure if I'm being daft, but assumed that 'pledge' is the same stuff you use when you do the housework.. Right?:pinch:

Storm
2nd May 2008, 10:00
Pledge is superior to Plexus for water beading and run-off in the wet. It also smells nicer.

Plus one- a good squirt and a rub with pledge and the gunk and bugs dont stick to your visor. Plus you can give the coffee table a good shine as well!!

Katman
2nd May 2008, 10:01
Where does one find "pledge" or "visor proof"? Bike shops?

Pledge = Supermarket
Visor Proof = Bike shop

TOTO
2nd May 2008, 10:15
I use RainX water repellent. Can buy it from repco.

Ragingrob
2nd May 2008, 10:18
I use RainX water repellent. Can buy it from repco.

Just found some RainX in the garage... It says do not use on plastics unless pre-approved by the manufacturer, has noone had any problems with this?

Edit : It also says do not use on non-clear surfaces or scratch resistant surfaces... Which my tinted visor has both, and my clear visor is scratch resistant...??

Blackbird
2nd May 2008, 10:51
Just found some RainX in the garage... It says do not use on plastics unless pre-approved by the manufacturer, has noone had any problems with this?

Edit : It also says do not use on non-clear surfaces or scratch resistant surfaces... Which my tinted visor has both, and my clear visor is scratch resistant...??

Rain X has a solvent as the carrier. Lexan-based visors are resistant to the solvent but cheaper ones aren't. If in doubt, don't use it. Pledge, Plexus or Visor-Proof are all fine.

vifferman
2nd May 2008, 10:54
Pledge is superior to Plexus for water beading and run-off in the wet. It also smells nicer.
It's also less than a quarter of the price.
Must get some when my Plexus runs out...

As for solvents (such as that found in Rain-X) affecting visors - I spent hours searching technical references on the Interdweeb a few months ago, and found very little concrete information such as test results to point to Eggs Zachary what the issue is here (i.e., which solvents affects which plastics, and how). It would appear that polycarbonate (Lexan) which most visors are made from is fairly resistant to chemicals, but long-term or repeated exposure can result in the plastic becomes more brittle. Furthermore, some solvents such as acetone (and petrol??) and strong acids can degrade the plastic, which will become murky.

One of the critical things is what you use to physically clean the visor: soft cloths are excellent, but some paper towels are slightly abrasive (they're made from wood pulp, y'know) and eventually the visor will end up with a myriad of microscopic scratches. If your visor is really grubby, with bug guts and dirt on it, it's best to wash it or wet it well to remove any grit or whatever before you use a cloth to rub it.

chubby
2nd May 2008, 11:30
Plus one- a good squirt and a rub with pledge and the gunk and bugs dont stick to your visor. Plus you can give the coffee table a good shine as well!!

I thought of that but I am worried that the coffee table may scratch my visor :doh:

KelvinAng
3rd May 2008, 20:35
windscreen wiper on the glove - no point in reinventing the wheel

When I bought my gloves and it had that wiper thing, the salesperson told me something along the line of "these wipers are pretty much of a fashion statement these days". I didn't believe they work, either.

But they actually work. Amazing. Problem (for me) is I would rather have both hands on my handlebars so I made only very minimal use of it...

Disco Dan
3rd May 2008, 20:57
bit o' window cleaner is all you need.

Pledge? House cleaning? huh??? :blink: ...I clean my house with bleach, whats pledge for?

CookMySock
3rd May 2008, 20:58
TurtleWax Ice

DB

chanceyy
3rd May 2008, 21:02
TurtleWax Ice

DB

how well does that work DB?

Maha
3rd May 2008, 21:07
Catcrap.

10 chars.

Old or new?....I found old cat shit a bit dusty.....:(

Disco Dan
3rd May 2008, 21:22
Old or new?....I found old cat shit a bit dusty.....:(

and there is always corn... :thinkingsmily:

CookMySock
5th May 2008, 15:58
how well does that work DB?Turtle Wax Ice works real good. I haven't used other stuff so I can't do a direct comparison for ya. I use it on my bike, so I just Ice everything with it. Quite similar to pledge et al.

DB

Swoop
10th May 2008, 23:04
Erm, not sure if I'm being daft, but assumed that 'pledge' is the same stuff you use when you do the housework.. Right?:pinch:
Yes. It contains "wax" instead of "silicone" which is preferable when you clean and dust your wooden furniture. (Do NOT use silicone on wooden furniture!)

As an added benefit, if you have an aircraft, the windscreen of that can be "pledged" as many pilots have proven over the years.

Great for water dispersal.

Snakeman
11th May 2008, 13:19
Remove visor from helmet first!

:2thumbsup :clap:

90s
12th May 2008, 12:20
Most of this has been done to death many times - not many have found rainx etc causing problems. I currently use rainx & the rainx for anti-fogging (fog-x?) and they are OK but needs frequent reapplications.
Motomail does cat crap (other Auckland bike shops seems not) and I'm goign to give it a try. There'e plenty of other products - most bike shops have some product they stock. Otherwise the household materials route seems to work too.

alanzs
15th May 2008, 22:46
Just bought some catcrap off trademe. Works pretty good so far. Left the house this morning it was 7 degrees. No fogging at all. After a few minutes, I did get frosting/heavy dew on the front of the visor, but the inside was clear. Now that I have used this and the fogcity antifog visor insert, I'd have to say that the fog city was equal to cat crap, but the cat crap doesn't give me as much distortion. So far, so good.

Elysium
30th January 2009, 17:12
Catshi...catcrap. Just used today so wil see if it keeps my visor clean and fog-free when I hit the south.

Dolph
30th January 2009, 20:51
Best be buying some pledge,...and a coffe table,...and a 737 !! :Punk: