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Peggie Hall wrote in message . com...
We must be talking about two different washers...'cuz the one I'm referring to isn't a Huskey, it's a Kaercher...and R 1750 psi it's definitely a lot more powerful than any car wash wand. Possibly? Most of us know the economical HD-sold unit as what I described; it has the same pressure rating BTW. It's unlikely there is a substantial difference at this low level of unit. I use mine to take the winter mold and mildew off my house--and it reaches the eaves on the second floor with no problem...also to take the "green stuff" off my deck...it blasts it right off. And also got water into any place in my boat's bilges that any other liquid could get into. However, I wouldn't even think of using it to wash my car...I'd be afraid it would damage the paint. I woudln't use a commercial pressure washer on my boat either...at 15000 psi, they can damage gelcoat or paint. Please let me share some things about pressure washers & pressure washing with you: Commercial PW's don't operate at 15,000 psi - that is industrial shipyard waterblasing equip't used in the drydock, and even those are more limited now over the past 20 years of OSHA & its foreign equivalents. Pressure rating also means little by itself - the important matter is the velocity at which the water meets the surface - i.e., a combination of pressure, nozzle size, pattern, pattern size & operator technique. Good PW operation takes training & practice. The effective & proper application of the jet to a surface to be cleaned is 90 degrees, which gives the highest impact velocity & is the only way to keep it uniform throughout strokes. Uniformity is important both for even results & to avoid damage to the substrate (especially wood). It is similar in concept to spraying paint. Wood, especially, should *never* be pressure-washed at any angle but 90 degrees, to prevent or minimize grain lifting/damage. A higher pressure & higher-volume (i.e., real-world) pressure washer does a far better & faster job than these lower-, low-volume consumer units, not because any higher impact velocity is employed in the cleaning - it isn't. But a much better-designed nozzle with the specific pattern needed for the job and the higher *nozzle* pressure are used to give a much wider sweep, which not only makes the work far faster but give far more uniform results. For example, whereas the toy 1750 psi unit on a 10' x 50' pressure-treated deck that needs real cleaning (weathering or heavy algae) will only clean 1-1/2" or so per pass on its fan pattern, and can take 3+ hours (don't ask how I proved it) a real unit will clean a whole plank width at a time with a much faster stoke - and very uniform, *without* as much risk of biting into the wood as the toy unit's nozzle which must be moved more slowly & less uniformly, and held more closely to the work. This same deck job takes 15 minutes with the real tool & is much more thorough. The little 1750 unit makes *more* wood damage due to its slower cleaning speed, at any impact velocities that qualify as an attempt to pressure-wash. The small unit is also much more fatiguing to operate, since its wand does not make enough recoil pressure to balance the outstretched arm as the real tool does, and must be held far longer. Whatever you are reaching up high or far away with it (I used the same or similar unit to knock down a high hornet nest this way while using it as a window-rinser), this isn't pressure washing, and the same may be done with other inexpensive types of hose nozzles that don't need to be powered. The only way you can pressure-wash your house siding is to be on a ladder or manlift at the same height where you can apply the spray at 90 degrees near the surface in a controlled, even sweep. Anything less than this is just hosing it off from a little further away. Another problem with these units is their detergent dispenser, which cannot be metered & which lays out the product very quickly (often expensive product that is more effective when more dilute, or that needs to be to avoid damage). And it is indeed the same sort of pressure delivery as the car washes, at least those here in the northeast. You needn't fear washing your car with the 1750 unit, and most who own one mainly use them for it. However, for cleaning a really dirty vehicle, hand-washing removes stuck-on crud faster & better than the 1750 PSI washer. I have proven this several times with my own vehicles. Same rule applies, too: always perpendicular to the work. Not only will the paint be safe, but for removing difficult things like baked-on pitch it is much easier on the paint (but slower) than hand-cleaning. For that matter, someone who knows how to properly operate a real pressure washer can safely wash any car with that, too. There is a lot more that can be said about this kind of unit, but I'll sum up by saying that though I have one, whenever I have a real cleaning task to do (such as wood house siding, hull cleaning, masonry, PT decks etc.), it is far cheaper, faster & better for me to rent a real unit. For even lighter-duty jobs, a 3-stage 5,000 PSI unit run at 2,500 - 3,000 is an efficient joy to use. After a lot of use of several kinds of pressure washers, I am convinced that using any that have less than a 3-stage pump & cost less than $1,000 on sale is a false economy, timewise, results-wise and costwise, for any application. At $40 - $50/day versus the outlay for the consumer machine divided by this rental rate, one can do several times the cleaning that the consumer machine will do in its useful lifetime. I'm at somewhat of a loss as to how you reach every part of a boat interior with any kind of water pressure tool, when the wand is necessarily long and cannot be bent, and there are many inaccessible voids or other areas not possible to spray directly with a straight wand. No direct spray = no cleaning. I think the dirt just flies off at you no matter what you use because of your magnetic personality, Peggy. ;-^) |
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