steve_64
Member
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2012
- Messages
- 13,372
how long does the water sit on the carpet before it is pulled up with a water claw? do you soak it down so that it penetrates the backing and pad and sub floor or are you just flushing the surface over and over? a latex backing doesnt allow much water to penetrate easily or quickly does it?
and if you soak it enough to get to the sub floor are you then spreading the spill?
ive done some flood work and i know you can pull water through the backing but i also know that if you hold your wand in one spot while triggering the valve the water doesnt penetrate the backing as much as it just gets pulled up the vacuum after traveling along the surface of the backing. i would think you would have to flood the area and give it time to soak down and then extract but that would also spread the spill below the pad leaving a larger area to deal with.
what am i missing?
for instance ron lippold runs what 24 flow at high pressure. is he blowing water through the backing? wouldnt that be bad for the backing especially with high heat? and im not trying to say anything about you ron, just using you as an example here. hope you dont mind.
i think of ron because someone talked about jetting a water claw in this manner. i would think you would have dump gallons of water on a spot and give it time to get to the sub floor through the backing and soaking through the pad to even reach the sub floor to have any impact on removing a spill. and giving it dwell time to release or reconstitute the dried substance enough to pull it out.
maybe im over thinking this?
and if you soak it enough to get to the sub floor are you then spreading the spill?
ive done some flood work and i know you can pull water through the backing but i also know that if you hold your wand in one spot while triggering the valve the water doesnt penetrate the backing as much as it just gets pulled up the vacuum after traveling along the surface of the backing. i would think you would have to flood the area and give it time to soak down and then extract but that would also spread the spill below the pad leaving a larger area to deal with.
what am i missing?
for instance ron lippold runs what 24 flow at high pressure. is he blowing water through the backing? wouldnt that be bad for the backing especially with high heat? and im not trying to say anything about you ron, just using you as an example here. hope you dont mind.
i think of ron because someone talked about jetting a water claw in this manner. i would think you would have dump gallons of water on a spot and give it time to get to the sub floor through the backing and soaking through the pad to even reach the sub floor to have any impact on removing a spill. and giving it dwell time to release or reconstitute the dried substance enough to pull it out.
maybe im over thinking this?