Hard as a hot doughnut.I remember back in the ICS daze when Stockwell and all the other gurus said Berber was difficult to clean
Me neither. I guess if something is lacking in your technique Berber will Rat you out, whereas cut pile will keep your secrets. Sometimes.Looks good, never understood why people have trouble with Berber style carpets.
I think maybe because of the texture, some guys would wand too quickly or use a machine not powerful enough to extract everything. Soil will wick up and the carpet may brown. Taking your time and using the proper equipment will deliver results like yours.Me neither. I guess if something is lacking in your technique Berber will Rat you out, whereas cut pile will keep your secrets. Sometimes.
It is with a shop vac and tap pressure.I remember back in the ICS daze when Stockwell and all the other gurus said Berber was difficult to clean
That is why I'll never understand what kept some of you ancestors in this business. With the tools you had to work with in the 70s and early 80s...made this work totally miserable.It is with a shop vac and tap pressure.
what kept some of you ancestors in this business.
Or a Bane.It is with a shop vac and tap pressure.
See, I'm not the only one who noticed that but did get my ass handed to me for posting about it.I see some video where guys hold the trigger forward, back, sideways. No dry strokes. And that’s just the way they do it. I thought maybe they being funny but nope. Just wetting the hell out of it on purpose. New video not throwback.
I meant it with the utmost respect.
Sometimes it’s hard to read my sarcasmdon't be a candyazz
....you'll get ate alive
..L.T.A.
Don't you mean strokeS?It's all about the dry stroke
No. I never had a problem with berber, ever.I remember back in the ICS daze when Stockwell and all the other gurus said Berber was difficult to clean