erugs
New member
This is an oddball question that doesn't really relate to hiking, except I'm sure a lot of us who hike experience it.
Why does the outside of the front windshield on my car frost up on cold nights when none of the other windows in the car do? I've noticed this when parked next to my friend's cars at his home in Maine; all three cars do the same thing. The three cars are facing east. It doesn't matter whether one or all of the cars have been used recently. It doesn't happen at my home in Manchester, but I'm facing north in an open-air style garage then.
It's not a problem, except that it makes getting going in the early hours take a little longer, require a little more effort and thought. Not just the get-up-and-go-right-away that I'm used to.
I did a little research online and found that I might not have the problem if I "coat them with a solution of 3 parts white distilled vinegar to 1 part water."
Why does the outside of the front windshield on my car frost up on cold nights when none of the other windows in the car do? I've noticed this when parked next to my friend's cars at his home in Maine; all three cars do the same thing. The three cars are facing east. It doesn't matter whether one or all of the cars have been used recently. It doesn't happen at my home in Manchester, but I'm facing north in an open-air style garage then.
It's not a problem, except that it makes getting going in the early hours take a little longer, require a little more effort and thought. Not just the get-up-and-go-right-away that I'm used to.
I did a little research online and found that I might not have the problem if I "coat them with a solution of 3 parts white distilled vinegar to 1 part water."