Reel Clean - Low pH Wash
Reel Clean is a low pH wash specifically engineered to dissolve salt crystals, mineral scale, and hard water deposits on contact - without stripping the ceramic coatings, waxes, or sealants you've already laid down.
Saltwater doesn't just leave salt. As it evaporates, it leaves calcium, magnesium, and iron minerals that bond hard to gelcoat, hardware, and trim. Standard pH-neutral washes can't touch mineral scale - they push it around with a wash mitt. Aggressive acid washes burn through your protection. Reel Clean splits the difference: acidic enough to break the mineral bond, balanced enough to leave your protection layer fully intact.
Key Features:
- Salt crystals lift off in one pass instead of being polished into the gelcoat with a mitt
- Hard water spots dissolve on glass, stainless, and chrome instead of being buffed
- Mineral scale at the waterline breaks down without aggressive scrubbing
- Bird strike, fish blood, and waterline scum lift cleaner because acidic chemistry breaks the mineral matrix holding the organic deposits in place
- Your ceramic coating, wax, or sealant stays right where you put it
- Made in the USA
How to Use — Foam Cannon
- Pre-rinse the boat with clean water, top to bottom. Knock off loose salt and grit before any product touches the surface.
- Load the foam cannon at manufacturer specs. Reel Clean foams aggressively — start lean (1 oz per 32 oz cannon bottle) and dial up only if you need more dwell.
- Apply foam from bottom to top, left to right. Lower panels are dirtier and need more dwell. Starting low prevents streak lines.
- Dwell 2–3 minutes. Foam should stay wet on the surface the entire time. Do not let it dry.
- Agitate stubborn spots with a soft wash mitt — waterline scum, bird strike, fish blood.
- Rinse thoroughly with clean water, top to bottom. Flush all residue.
- Dry immediately with a clean microfiber or Sandman's drying towel.
How to Use — Bucket Method
- Pre-rinse the boat with clean water, top to bottom.
- Mix 2 oz Reel Clean per gallon of clean water in your wash bucket.
- Two-bucket setup recommended. One wash bucket with Reel Clean, one rinse bucket with clean water. Grit guard in each.
- Wash in panels top to bottom with a soft mitt.
- Rinse your mitt in the clean bucket every panel — never let salt grit ride back to the surface.
- Rinse the boat fully with clean water as you work. Do not let soap dry on the surface.
- Final flood rinse end to end.
- Dry immediately with a clean microfiber.
Ready-to-use foam cannon formula. Dilute 2 oz per gallon for bucket use.
✅ Safe to Use On
- Ceramic coatings (will not degrade SiO₂ layer)
- Carnauba and synthetic waxes
- Paint sealants
- Marine-grade paint and gelcoat
- Fiberglass
- Vinyl seats, decals, and wraps
- Isinglass and clear vinyl windows
- Stainless steel hardware and rails
- Polished aluminum
- Anodized aluminum
- Chrome
- Powder-coated trailers and frames
- Painted outboard cowlings
- Glass (doubles as hard water spot remover)
- Painted brightwork
- Vinyl graphics and lettering (limit dwell)
❌ Do NOT Use On
- Raw, unsealed metals — extended exposure to low pH can etch over time
- Bare or unfinished cast iron — flash corrosion risk
- Natural stone surfaces near the wash area (slate, marble, limestone) — acidic chemistry etches stone
- Concrete you care about long-term — pre-rinse first or work over a tarp
- Hot surfaces or panels in direct sun — wait for ambient temp
- Galvanized metal in extended contact — rinse promptly if exposed
- Active oxidation/rust — Reel Clean lifts mineral deposits, not raw rust
- Open electrical components — rinse-safe but do not direct spray
- Do not mix with bleach, alkaline soaps, or ammonia products — produces toxic reactions
When in doubt — test in an inconspicuous area first.
Pro Tips from the Field
- Work in shade when possible. Low pH chemistry is more forgiving than aggressive acid wash, but no soap should dry on the surface.
- Top-down for bucket, bottom-up for foam. Bucket method generates dirty water — gravity carries it off cleaned panels. Foam method builds dwell on dirtier lower panels first.
- Two-bucket setup with a grit guard keeps your mitt clean and prevents fine swirl marks on coated finishes.
- Rinse your foam cannon between products. Residual alkaline soap in the cannon will neutralize Reel Clean and kill the foam.
- Don't skip the pre-rinse. Salt crystals on a dry hull turn into sandpaper under a wash mitt.
- Wash down within 24 hours of your trip. The longer salt sits, the harder the mineral bond, the harder the next wash.
- Reel Clean doubles as a hard water spot remover. Light dwell on glass, chrome, and stainless dissolves the calcium deposits standard washes leave behind.
- For trailers and lower units, apply foam first and let it dwell while you wash the hull. Hit the trailer last before final rinse — salt at hubs and bunks is the #1 cause of trailer rust.
- Stack with Boost Pro every 4–6 weeks. Reel Clean strips the salt and minerals, Boost Pro refreshes the ceramic layer.
- Marina/dockside use: capture rinse water with absorbent pads when possible.
Safety
Reel Clean causes serious eye irritation and mild skin irritation.
Handling:
- Wear chemical-resistant gloves for extended use
- Wear sealed eye protection
- Wear closed-toe shoes
- Old clothing for overhead work
- Use in well-ventilated area
If exposed:
- Eyes: Wash with plenty of water for at least 15 minutes. Remove contact lenses if present and easy to do. Continue rinsing. Seek medical attention if irritation persists.
- Skin: Remove contaminated clothing immediately. Rinse skin with water/shower. Seek medical attention if irritation persists.
- Inhaled: Move person to fresh air and keep comfortable for breathing.
- Swallowed: Call Poison Control (1-800-222-1222) or doctor immediately. Do NOT induce vomiting.
Keep out of reach of children.
Storage
- Store in a cool, well-ventilated place. Keep container tightly closed.
- Protect from freezing. Freeze damage can crack the bottle and separate the formula.
- Do not store in direct sunlight.
- Store away from bleach, alkaline cleaners, and ammonia products.
- Dispose of contents and container in accordance with applicable local, state, and federal laws.