Pressure Washers

arkjarhead

Veteran Expediter
I agree completely Phil a pressure washer has so many uses. When I was a teen we had to wash our wooden privacy fence. We had an electrical one and it worked great for wooden fences,cars, vinyl siding, and drive ways. I guess I just assumed that you were going to use it to wash your truck. Another example of why you should never assume things.
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
Phil,
Probably could have eliminated half the posts had you mentioned what your intent was. Since it is a trucking site, ones first thought would likely be that is was going to be used for a truck.:confused:

We have one but have only used it on a truck maybe half a dozen times at best. Mostly use it for farm equipment and horse trailers. Real handy for either one of those.
We have the same or simlar one to Turtle's.
 

pelicn

Veteran Expediter
For the most part, we use our pressure washer for general cleaning around the house. We've used it on the truck, but found that a truck wash is more efficient than we are. :eek:
What I have discovered, is that it does an excellent job at washing the rugs we have in the truck. I just lay them out on the driveway an spray the heck out of them. It fluffs up the carpet fibers an gives them a good deep cleaning.
 

ATeam

Senior Member
Retired Expediter
Phil,
Probably could have eliminated half the posts had you mentioned what your intent was. Since it is a trucking site, ones first thought would likely be that is was going to be used for a truck.

With the moderators' full blessings, this forum, including the General Forum, is full of posts that have nothing to do with expediting, trucking or the business. No member needs to be a mind reader and predict how other people will perceive one's intent, especially when the posts are not personal and totally on topic; as my simple request for pressure washer info was.

Such an inquiry does not deserve to be twisted into a Code-of-Conduct-violating, more-money-than-brains rant and a personal attack. The thread was about pressure washers. Broompilot made it personal and took it down a negative path. Those kinds of rants discourage people from asking questions in a place where questions are otherwise encouraged.

Certain members would do well to pause and remember that the ways that are right for them are not the ways that are right for everyone. If people do things different than you, that does not make them stupid or wrong.
 

Dynamite 1

Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
as far as you never use a pressure washer on a show car, you are rite. never get up close and blast it, but since most never get extremely dirty, if you keep your distance the nice fine mist that all produce when you stand back is actually less pressure than the tipical garden hose even when it is on a fan spray, but you are definatly rite never blast it. some of the cars in our group have have even more expensive in terms of the time to paint and finish than 8000.00 dollars. you seem to appreciate old stuff greg, we have a guy who has a pair of old woodies a 47 + 48 a town and country convertible which there are only very few left and a buick wagon with a really neat camping option.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
as far as you never use a pressure washer on a show car, you are rite. never get up close and blast it, but since most never get extremely dirty, if you keep your distance the nice fine mist that all produce when you stand back is actually less pressure than the tipical garden hose even when it is on a fan spray, but you are definatly rite never blast it. some of the cars in our group have have even more expensive in terms of the time to paint and finish than 8000.00 dollars. you seem to appreciate old stuff greg, we have a guy who has a pair of old woodies a 47 + 48 a town and country convertible which there are only very few left and a buick wagon with a really neat camping option.

I understand what you are saying but many would blast the finish with high pressure and that all she wrote. The water is one issue but the other is with the air flow, there are fine particles that are picked up and with a dark finish, like a rubbed out black or dark blue, it can give you fine chips in the surface and ruin the work.

$8000 was being conservative but again I see people who dump $15k into a paint job on a hack hot rod which is not even metal finished, so I come from the old school that serious restoration is much much harder than cut and pasting a car. Not that I hat hot rods, I just can't bring myself to destroying a rare car to make a quick buck.

I had a 48 T&C and a 37 Packard Wagon in the past, I know about the wood issue, hand wash only. The T&C was a 'barn' find with 7000 miles on it.
 

Refer Hauler

Expert Expediter
I have a Craftsman 3000 psi with a 7 Hp honda engine bought it during a Fall/winter closeout sale on lawn stuff. think I paid around $275 for it. It was new and had full warranty.
Look at Landa or Hotsy brands ($$$$) they have some good attachments and cleaners

I dont really wash the truck with it very much but have cleaned off the frame rails and undercarriage a time or two,mostly to get the winter salt and grime off.

Neighbor has a 1500 psi unit, not enough power in my opinion. He used mine to strip his deck before refinishing
 

Crazynuff

Veteran Expediter
Sorry I didn't get back sooner . I had 2 units - a 3,000 psi Xcel with a 500 gallon tank mounted in an 18' Mercedes straight truck I bought from Ryder and a 2,000 psi Hotsy with a 100 gallon tank in an F-250 pickup . The Hotsy was adequate for most jobs . I would rent the rigs to the mud racers when they came around with the monster trucks every year as well as mud boggers at county fairs . There's a wide variety of chemicals available . Grainger sells both the washers and chemicals Janitorial & Painting > Chemicals > Automotive Cleaners and Protectants > Vehicle Wash,5 Gal : Grainger Industrial Supply . I liked buying from Grainger because the prices are good and they give full info including the MSDS . You want biodegradable products if possible . It's most economical to brush the chemicals on rather than use chemical injection on the washer . It wouldn't hurt to keep a spare hose . Burst hoses can be repaired at shops selling and servicing hydraulic hoses . I'd watch eBay and local auctions for a good buy . When there is a chance of freezing weather run windshield washer fluid through the machine and hoses .
 
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