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Car detailers use a new trick to dry cars without touching them — It prevents scratches and streaks

Car detailers use a new trick to dry cars without touching them — It prevents scratches and streaks

By Michael Delorme | Automotive Lifestyle Editor | February 12, 2026

Last Sunday morning, Tom Hartley did something millions of truck owners do every weekend.


He stood in his driveway in Clearwater, Florida, rinsed down his black Ford F-150 Lariat, and grabbed his drying towel — a $40 "ultra-plush, scratch-free" microfiber cloth the detailing forums swore was safe.

He dried the hood first. Then the doors. Then the tailgate. It looked perfect. Wet, shiny, clean.


Then the morning sun crept above the tree line and hit the hood at a low angle.
Tom froze.

 

"I saw them," Tom told me, still sounding angry about it. "Hundreds of tiny circular scratches. Spider-webs. Swirl marks. All over my hood and doors. This truck is my pride and joy. I wash it myself every single Sunday because I don't trust car washes. And I just found out that I was the one destroying it."


He threw the towel in his garage trash can. That $40 "premium" cloth went straight in the bin.


"I stood there staring at my truck and I only had two choices," Tom said. "Accept that my paint was going to look worse every time I washed it. Or find a way to dry it without ever touching the surface."


What Tom found next is the reason I'm writing this article.

The Dirty Secret Your Microfiber Towel Company Won't Tell You

The Dirty Secret Your Microfiber Towel Company Won't Tell You

Here's the thing nobody talks about in the car care aisle at AutoZone:
Friction is the number-one destroyer of automotive paint.


It doesn't matter how soft your towel is. It doesn't matter if you paid $15 or $80 for "premium Korean microfiber." The physics are unavoidable.


When you wash your car, microscopic particles — dust, road grit, mineral deposits from your water — settle on the surface. No rinse removes 100% of them. They're invisible to the naked eye.


When you wipe a towel across that surface, you're dragging those particles across your clear coat. You're creating friction. And that friction cuts thousands of micro-scratches into the finish.


That's what swirl marks are. They're not "wear and tear." They're towel damage.
Every time you "dry" your car, you're sanding it.

And Car Washes? They're Even Worse

And Car Washes? They're Even Worse

If towels are sandpaper, automatic car washes are belt sanders.


Those spinning brushes don't get cleaned between vehicles. The truck before yours had mud, gravel, and road salt caked on it. Those particles are now embedded in the brush bristles — and they're about to be dragged across your paint at high speed.


Even so-called "touchless" car washes aren't innocent. To compensate for no brushes, they blast your vehicle with harsh chemical detergents that strip wax, degrade ceramic coatings, and slowly eat through your clear coat.


And their drying systems? Weak air blowers that leave water standing in every crevice. You drive away, and five minutes later, water drips from your mirrors and door handles, leaving mineral spots baked into the paint by the sun.


Here's what the numbers look like:

Microfiber Towel

Automatic Car Wash

Touches the paint?

✅ No

❌ Yes

❌ Yes

Causes scratches?

✅ No

Yes

❌ Yes

Reaches drip zones?

✅ Yes

❌ No

❌ Yes

Physical effort?

✅ None

❌ High

✅ None

Safe for coatings?

✅ Yes

⚠️ Risky

❌ No

Drying time

4 min

20+ min

5 min

Tom didn't know any of this. Neither did I, until I started researching this article.

But Tom did what Tom does. He went looking for a solution.

What a Detailing Forum Post Led Him To

What a Detailing Forum Post Led Him To

Tom spent three nights reading threads on F150Forum.com and AutoGeek. He wasn't looking for a better towel. He was looking for a way to never touch his paint again.

 

He kept seeing the same phrase: "touchless drying." One thread had 340 replies. The original poster — a professional detailer in Arizona — had written:


"I stopped using towels on client vehicles two years ago. I use a handheld turbine blower. It shoots a focused jet of filtered air at 200 mph. The water doesn't dry — it gets blasted off. No contact. No friction.

No scratches. My clients' paint looks better after 12 months than it did the day I started."


The tool he was talking about? A compact device called the Seese Pro.
Tom ordered one that night.

The Numbers That Made Me a Believer

The Numbers That Made Me a Believer

When the Seese Pro arrived at our office for testing, I'll admit: I almost didn't take it seriously. The box was small. The device itself was smaller. 

Next to my full-size leaf blower that I'd been using to dry my truck, it looked like a toy.

 

Then I read the spec sheet, and my skepticism cracked:

  • Turbine speed: 110,000 RPM (for context, a Formula 1 engine maxes out at 15,000 RPM)
  • Air velocity: 200 MPH — a focused jet, not a scattered breeze
  • Weight: 2.1 lbs (my phone, wallet, and keys together weigh more)
  • Air intake: Filtered — no dust, pollen, or debris gets blown onto your paint
  • Motor type: Brushless — no friction wear, 3x longer lifespan than standard motors
  • Battery: Cordless 21V, compatible with DeWalt, Makita, and Milwaukee 18V/20V packs

But I've been in this business long enough to know that specs don't mean anything until you see results.

So we tested it.

The "Drip Zone" Test: Towel vs. Seese Pro

The "Drip Zone" Test: Towel vs. Seese Pro

We set up a head-to-head comparison on a freshly washed black vehicle—the perfect test subject. Dark clear coat exposes every tiny towel scratch, and modern designs are packed with water-trapping crevices in the grilles and mirrors where towels simply can't reach.

 

Test #1: Premium Microfiber Towel

I used a brand-new, freshly laundered "ultra-plush" drying towel. Cost: $35.

  • Time to dry the full truck: 22 minutes
  • Physical effort: Brutal. I had to stretch across the hood, climb on my running boards to reach the roof, bend down for the rocker panels, and wring out the towel seven times. My lower back was aching by minute 15. My right shoulder — which already has a bad rotator cuff — was on fire.
  • The mirrors and grille: Still dripping 10 minutes after I "finished." I had to go back and re-wipe the doors where water had trickled down.
  • The paint under direct sunlight: Fresh swirl marks on the hood. Right where I'd wiped the hardest. Exactly what Tom warned me about.

Test #2: The Seese Pro

Same vehicle. Same wash. Same sun.

I pointed the lime-green barrel at the side mirror and pulled the trigger.

 

WHOOSH. The water didn't just dry—it was violently ejected from deep inside the housing. One second it was there, the next, gone. I moved to the honeycomb grille, the lug nuts, and the panel gaps. Every crevice a towel can't reach was cleared in seconds.

  • Time to dry the full truck: 4 minutes, 40 seconds.
  • Physical effort: I held it with one hand. I didn't bend down once. I didn't break a sweat.
  • The paint under direct sunlight: I walked around the truck three times looking for swirl marks. There were none. Not one. Because I never touched the surface.
  • Drip zones: Bone dry. Nothing running down the doors. Nothing weeping from the mirrors. For the first time in my life, the truck was actually dry when I said it was dry.

I stood back and realized something:

The towel didn't dry my truck. It just moved the water around and scratched the paint in the process.

But Can It Really Replace a Towel?

but can it really replace a towel?

That was my first question too. So let me address the three doubts I had:

 

"It's so small — is it really powerful enough for a full-size truck?"

Yes. The turbine spins at 110,000 RPM and pushes air at 200 MPH. For reference, most gas-powered leaf blowers push air at 100-150 MPH, but their airflow is scattered and unfiltered. The Seese Pro concentrates its air into a surgical jet. It doesn't just dry — it strips water off the surface.

 

"What about road grime and bug splatter? I still need to wipe those."

Correct — the Seese Pro is a drying tool, not a washing tool. You still wash your vehicle the way you always have. But the drying step — which is where 90% of swirl marks happen — is now completely touchless.

 

"Won't it blow dust onto my paint?"

No. Unlike leaf blowers, the Seese Pro has a filtered air intake. It only blows clean air. That's why professional detailers use it — they can't risk contaminating a $100,000 paint job.

"What If I Have a Big Vehicle?"

The included 21V battery handles most full-size trucks and SUVs on a single charge.

 

But here's the feature that truck guys love: the Seese Pro is compatible with DeWalt, Makita, and Milwaukee 18V/20V batteries. If you already own power tools — and let's be honest, most of us have a drawer full of DeWalt batteries — you can swap them in and dry your truck, your wife's SUV, and your buddy's Corvette without stopping.

What 2,400+ Verified Buyers Are Saying

The Seese Pro has a 4.9-star rating from 2,410 verified reviews. Here are three that stood out:

"I'm 62 with a torn rotator cuff. Drying my F-150 was the worst part of washing it. Reaching across the hood, wringing out soaking towels — I'd be in pain for two days afterward. With the Seese Pro, I dry the whole truck one-handed in five minutes. My shoulder doesn't even know I did anything. I honestly can't believe I spent years torturing myself with towels."

— Gary R., 62, Texas

I'm paranoid about swirl marks. I've spent over $500 on 'premium' drying towels and chamois cloths. Last month I got the Seese Pro, and I haven't touched my paint since. I just washed and dried my car in 20 minutes, and under the garage lights, the finish looks better than the day I bought it.

Jim S., 57, Arizona

I own a black Corvette C8, so I'm paranoid about swirl marks. I've spent over $500 on 'premium' drying towels and chamois cloths. Last month I got the Seese Pro, and I haven't touched my paint since. I just washed and dried my car in 20 minutes, and under the garage lights, the finish looks better than the day I bought it. My detailer asked me what I was doing differently."

— Jim S., 57, Arizona

The Real Cost of Drying Your Car the Old Way

Let's do the math:

  • Paint correction (to fix swirl marks from towel damage): $600 – $1,200 per session
  • Premium microfiber towels (replaced every few months): $150+ over two years
  • Automatic car wash membership: $1,300/year — plus paint damage
  • Chiropractor visits (back/shoulder pain from bending and wringing): $85 – $150 per visit
    Your Sunday morning spent hunched over your truck with a wet towel: priceless — and not in a good way

The Seese Pro retails for $249.99. But right now, there's a Flash Sale that drops the price to $119.99 — a 55% discount — and includes three free gifts worth $110:

  • FREE: High-Capacity 21V Battery ($70 value)
  • FREE: Noise-Canceling Earplugs ($25 value)
  • FREE: $15 Store Gift Card

SPECIAL READER OFFER

UPDATE: Following the craze for our article, the Seese brand has decided to offer an exceptional discount to the first 1,000 readers.

 

Which means you can now get the Seese Pro not at full price, but with a significant discount (check the current price via the link below)! They ship quickly and have a very responsive customer service team.

 

If you’d like to get yours, simply click the button below to check the availability of the Seese Pro.

 

PS: Stock sells out quickly because it’s gardening season. If you’re interested, we recommend not waiting too long.

>> Check Availability & Claim Your 55% Discount

Try It Risk-Free for 30 Days

Every Seese Pro comes with:

  • 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee: If you don't love it, return it for a full refund. No questions.
  • Lifetime Warranty: If anything breaks, ever, they'll replace it.
  • Fast Shipping: Orders ship within 24-48 hours.

Why You Shouldn't Wait

The New Year sale ends soon, and stock is limited. The company sold 12,847 units last month alone.

If you would like to take advantage of the 55% discount, I recommend placing your order today.

Final Verdict: Is the Seese Pro Worth It?

After three weeks of testing it on trucks, SUVs, sedans, and one very pampered Corvette, here's my honest take:

 

The Seese Pro isn't just a better way to dry your car. It's the end of towel damage.

It's what happens when aerospace turbine technology gets miniaturized into a tool that fits in your glove box — and does in 5 minutes what used to take 25 minutes of back-breaking, paint-scratching, towel-wringing work.

 

Will it replace a full professional detailing setup? No. But for the 99% of us who wash our own cars in the driveway every weekend, it eliminates the single most destructive step in the process.

 

My prediction: within three years, touchless drying will be standard. Every major tool brand will sell their own version — at twice the price. You can either wait for that. Or you can protect your paint starting this Sunday.

 

P.S. If you've ever found fresh scratches on a car you just "cleaned" — if you've ever watched water drip from your mirrors five minutes after you finished drying — if your back or shoulder aches every Monday morning because of Sunday's wash ritual — do yourself a favor.

Try this thing for 30 days. If it doesn't change how you think about drying your car, send it back.

But I have a feeling you won't.

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seese pro blower – save 90% of your cleaning time

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