Back in March, a few of us chimed in on a thread titled, "nozzles for house wash" started by Duramax and the discussion soon turned into ball valves, triggerless guns, and methods to keep guns in the open position. My method used a velcro strap that works great but as I later found out there is no room for error. As I was doing some flat work, I inadvertently stumbled on the curb falling down. I let go of the wand and unfortunately it kept spraying until I was able to get up and shut down the machine. I was fortunate nothing was damaged or broken.
At that point, I remembered that thread and the suggestion to use a tennis ball and if the wand was dropped for some reason the ball would pop out shutting the pressure down. I have now gone to the tennis ball method for my helpers instead of velcro. I decided to stay with a triggerless gun and ball valve that was also suggested in the same thread. Of course, this method has the same potential concerns as velcro but I'm hard headed sometimes.
My helpers didn't like this method as much as the velcro because they had to keep up with the tennis ball when not in use. Our remedy was to find a way to attach the tennis ball to the gun that was easy to put in place and remove without having to keep up with the ball. I have attached a few pictures below showing our new method. Seems to work really well.
Basically, I put two small slits in the tennis ball that resemble a "T". The slits were about 2/3 the size of the ball on the opposite end of the bungie. Then I just pushed the bungie ball into the tennis ball.
Back in March, a few of us chimed in on a thread titled, "nozzles for house wash" started by Duramax and the discussion soon turned into ball valves, triggerless guns, and methods to keep guns in the open position. My method used a velcro strap that works great but as I later found out there is no room for error. As I was doing some flat work, I inadvertently stumbled on the curb falling down. I let go of the wand and unfortunately it kept spraying until I was able to get up and shut down the machine. I was fortunate nothing was damaged or broken.
At that point, I remembered that thread and the suggestion to use a tennis ball and if the wand was dropped for some reason the ball would pop out shutting the pressure down. I have now gone to the tennis ball method for my helpers instead of velcro. I decided to stay with a triggerless gun and ball valve that was also suggested in the same thread. Of course, this method has the same potential concerns as velcro but I'm hard headed sometimes.
My helpers didn't like this method as much as the velcro because they had to keep up with the tennis ball when not in use. Our remedy was to find a way to attach the tennis ball to the gun that was easy to put in place and remove without having to keep up with the ball. I have attached a few pictures below showing our new method. Seems to work really well.
Basically, I put two small slits in the tennis ball that resemble a "T". The slits were about 2/3 the size of the ball on the opposite end of the bungie. Then I just pushed the bungie ball into the tennis ball.
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