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Washing your vehicle can be one of the more harmful things done around the house. When you wash your car, truck, RV, or boat at home water running off generally finds its way to nearby storm drains. Storm drains carry excess rainwater directly into nearby waterways without any additional cleaning of that water. Since local waterways in the watershed of the Sound generally feed into the Sound, whatever runs off of your driveway winds up untreated in Long Island Sound, so putting anything down a storm drain is the equivalent of dumping it straight into your local lake, river or Sound. So why is that a bad thing? PROBLEM CAR WASH OPTIONS AND WATER CONSUMPTION – A standard 5/8"garden hose running at 50 pounds per square inch uses 10 gallons of water per minute (this is without the use of a nozzle that stops the continuous flow of water). • Washing your car at a self-serve car wash: a total of 12 to 14 gallons for the average amount of dirt (a very dirty car would require more) – Foaming Brush uses approximately 1 quart of water during a four minute cycle; • Professional car washing: a total of l1.1 gallons (this number is for the average compact car, SUVs and trucks combine to bring the average of all vehicles to 20 gallons) – Flow rate: 2.6 minutes wash and rinse at 3 gallons per minute; 5.3 minutes pre-soak foaming brush and tire & engine cleaning at 0.6 gallons per minute. The water from your carwash contains pollutants ranging from oil, grease, and suspended solids to detergents. Detergents, such as the carwash or liquid soap can seriously affect the water quality of local waterways. They are a universal contaminant of public water supplies. Some of pollutants they contain are as follows: phosphates, sodium, potassium, boron salts, enzymes, cellulose ethers, flurescers, silicates and sulphates with phosphates being the biggest offender.
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