How Not to Wash Your Supercars
Some people absolutely love washing their cars. It’s a sign of their affection, a sign of their ownership, a sign of them being entirely too anal about something that’s literally made to get dirty.
If you haven’t guessed by the end of that last sentence, I’m of the school that doesn’t like clean cars. I want to see tire pebbles on the back bumper; I want to see the mud flicking up from the tires. I want something that looks like it’s used on a daily basis. A clean car just doesn’t give off that appearance.
I do have one caveat. A clean supercar is an absolutely stunning thing. For normal cars, they can be dirty. Even most sportscars should be dirty. But supercars? No, they should be clean.
Supercars need to show off all the little bits of carbon, all the little details that their engineers painstakingly sweated out. Supercars deserve to get a washing. However, we’re not too sure that this is the right way.
Taken in London, this man is not exactly being gentle with the bevy of supercars. In the pack includes a Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse, a Zonda Cinque, an Enzo, a Huayra, and a Brabus G-Class. All apart from the Brabus deserve to be hand-washed. Not treated like some lowly Honda.
FOR SHAME.