Windows
#1
#2
The weather can be a small factor in what's going on. Where are you from?
Also, do you keep drinks in your car over night? Open soda cans, fast food drinks, things like that?
Another thing can be if you are a "hot" bodied person too. If it is cool outside and you get into the car and your body is hot from whatever (working out, playing a sport, or you are just a naturally hot running person, the glass on fog up from your heat.
With the drinks in you car, this is what happens. After you shut the car off, the fans are no longer running and engine heat will trickle into the cabin area. Not enough to do damage, but if you have open containers with liquid in it, enough that will cause it to evaporate and condense on to the windows. This can cause the what looks to you the interior of the window sweating.
Also, do you keep drinks in your car over night? Open soda cans, fast food drinks, things like that?
Another thing can be if you are a "hot" bodied person too. If it is cool outside and you get into the car and your body is hot from whatever (working out, playing a sport, or you are just a naturally hot running person, the glass on fog up from your heat.
With the drinks in you car, this is what happens. After you shut the car off, the fans are no longer running and engine heat will trickle into the cabin area. Not enough to do damage, but if you have open containers with liquid in it, enough that will cause it to evaporate and condense on to the windows. This can cause the what looks to you the interior of the window sweating.
#3
#4