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GymRat

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Posts posted by GymRat


  1. John, thats much more likely to happen using an X-Jet. If you you use a good soap (with the right surfactants) it rarely will dry.

    I think part of Jarrod's problem is his soap. E-plus is not a great product. It dries very quickly and I found it to be an inferior housewash. The guys that swear by it always are X-Jetters. Downstreaming will let you know if you have the right mix and product.

    I use citracleen, which I believe to be a higher end house cleaner. I will only soap 2 sides if the house has only a few windows on those sides and the sun is not directly hitting either side. I'm scared to make a mess of the customers windows and have to spend twice the time coming back and correcting my mistake. Of course this all depends on the temperature also.


  2. When I used the Xjet, the 15 gallon drum on a hand cart was the method I liked the most. It was nice to do a couple sides of the house without moving the cart. I had 50' of hose attatched to the drum and parked it at the corner of the house. Still didn't like the high pressure hose and xjet hose always getting tangled, so went to downstreaming and will never go back.


  3. Has anyone had any experience filing a claim with Joe Walters. I here so many good things about him, is that because he has a lot of knowledge of our industry and can talk our talk, just wanted to know if he backs it with the same great service? I use a local insurer, but never had to file any claims, thank goodness.

    I guess noboby has had any claims with Mr Walters, just a nice guy with pressure washing knowledge is all I've heard so far. Yes John T. I had and indepth conversation with my insurance agent and I'm covered under all pressure washing, same coverage I had discussed with Mr Walters before I decided on a local agent.


  4. Has anyone had any experience filing a claim with Joe Walters. I here so many good things about him, is that because he has a lot of knowledge of our industry and can talk our talk, just wanted to know if he backs it with the same great service? I use a local insurer, but never had to file any claims, thank goodness.


  5. Image has a lot to do with it also. Potential customers see you out with a nice trailer with fancy equipment (even if you don't have a clue what you are doing), vs seeing someone with a home depot pressure washer in the back of a pickup truck, with no signage--get the picture, who appears to be the proffesional.


  6. Brian, thats a lot of walking back and forth to the trailer, listen to Ken,and try downstreaming, you won't go back. Yes I love the M-5 for rinsing, because it has an adjustable spray pattern, so you can rinse the entire house with one nozzle. Brian you can get the 25' reach using a 25degree tip, but you have to go a lot larger in orifice size to get that, and that is probably what Ken is talking about. That way he can use a 2540 tip and soap down most two story houses top to bottom with one tip. With those two nozzles in my arsenal, I can clean most houses.


  7. Great idea Scott, but the page advertising the shirt brings up the enlarged front view of the shirt even when I click on the back view. I also noticed in Bobs write up that the term pressure washer mafia is used, but on the shirt Power is used. I have designed Tshirts in the past, and know how much time and work it can entail. Thanks Scott


  8. The pool guy was correct. I always recommend that pool aprons be done after the cover has been removed. If it needs to be cleaned with the cover in place, I will spray a bleach solution and rinse with a garden hose, followed (usually) with an oxalic acid spray and another rinse. (The bleach will kill the mold/mildew and the acid will brighten the concrete.) Do not spray directly on the cover and rinse, rinse, rinse.

    How much to charge depends on how much area to clean, how dirty, your market. For me, an average job like this would be in the $200 neighborhood.

    I agree with the method above, and I have found out from experience, if you are pricing the job per square foot, measure the whole area and count the pool as part of your measurement. What I'm trying to say is, Don't subtract the pool itself from your measurement, unless you want to under price the job.


  9. You can have the most knowledge, be the best at what you do, but still unable to teach. There are plenty of people that are the best at what they do, but their people skills, communication skills or whatever prevents them from conveying thier knowledge to someone else.

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