Here’s my best guess – physical wetting of the glass surface at a microscopic level because the blade has wiped the water into the structure and also polishing due to road grit being captured and moved across the surface.
The wetting is similar to wiping out a dry glass with a wet cloth before pouring a beer. If the glass is dry, the head foams more. Wet? No foamy head.
The reverse effect is probably like Mentos and diet coke… something about the surface of the Mentos is just right to cause the carbonation to effervesce quickly.
I use Rain-X, and I see less of a difference between the wiped and unwiped area – probably because the coating stays put.
Here’s my best guess – physical wetting of the glass surface at a microscopic level because the blade has wiped the water into the structure and also polishing due to road grit being captured and moved across the surface.
The wetting is similar to wiping out a dry glass with a wet cloth before pouring a beer. If the glass is dry, the head foams more. Wet? No foamy head.
The reverse effect is probably like Mentos and diet coke… something about the surface of the Mentos is just right to cause the carbonation to effervesce quickly.
I use Rain-X, and I see less of a difference between the wiped and unwiped area – probably because the coating stays put.
Water is cohesive, meaning that it likes sticking together, which is how you can fill a glass slightly above the top and the water will form a curved bubble rising above the glass.
The water on your windshield is just droplets, separate little drops that stick together. That’s why they don’t just immediately run down the windshield as a bunch of little rivers. They’re sticking together as droplets. When you wipe them, the droplets all get pushed along together and combine, and even though a lot of that water gets flicked away, you’ve now added water all along the path of the blade.
Not *a lot* of water, very little, but enough so that any water that falls onto that area doesn’t need to stick together as a droplet. Because that new water gets to stick to all the water molecules already spread across the windshield by your wiper blade, so it just spreads itself out nice and comfy.
To put it in simpler (although not at all ELI5) terms, compare masturbating alone to being at an orgy. When you’re masturbating alone, you’re staying in one spot, but when dropped into an orgy you’ll make your way all around the room and have a great time.
TL;DR the water where your wipers pass are having an orgy before the wiper comes back.
Water is cohesive, meaning that it likes sticking together, which is how you can fill a glass slightly above the top and the water will form a curved bubble rising above the glass.
The water on your windshield is just droplets, separate little drops that stick together. That’s why they don’t just immediately run down the windshield as a bunch of little rivers. They’re sticking together as droplets. When you wipe them, the droplets all get pushed along together and combine, and even though a lot of that water gets flicked away, you’ve now added water all along the path of the blade.
Not *a lot* of water, very little, but enough so that any water that falls onto that area doesn’t need to stick together as a droplet. Because that new water gets to stick to all the water molecules already spread across the windshield by your wiper blade, so it just spreads itself out nice and comfy.
To put it in simpler (although not at all ELI5) terms, compare masturbating alone to being at an orgy. When you’re masturbating alone, you’re staying in one spot, but when dropped into an orgy you’ll make your way all around the room and have a great time.
TL;DR the water where your wipers pass are having an orgy before the wiper comes back.
Wear patterns on the hard-to-see microscopic dirt that’s on the glass. Near the edge it is fallen dirt, and in the wiper pattern, it’s smeared dirt
If you clean the windshield properly, really degrease it, get everything off, maybe even get it a wee polish with glass cleaner, then remove all the products back to only having pure water on it, then dry it and wax it (if you get this done professionally, they’ll call it ‘sealing’ but it’s just wax) then wax off, then you won’t be able to see water collecting anywhere
It’s because water has a ‘sticky’ property to it, where it doesn’t shed as well if it has something to grab onto, it will form beads or a thin surface covering
Wear patterns on the hard-to-see microscopic dirt that’s on the glass. Near the edge it is fallen dirt, and in the wiper pattern, it’s smeared dirt
If you clean the windshield properly, really degrease it, get everything off, maybe even get it a wee polish with glass cleaner, then remove all the products back to only having pure water on it, then dry it and wax it (if you get this done professionally, they’ll call it ‘sealing’ but it’s just wax) then wax off, then you won’t be able to see water collecting anywhere
It’s because water has a ‘sticky’ property to it, where it doesn’t shed as well if it has something to grab onto, it will form beads or a thin surface covering
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