Bill Soukoreff
Member
A couple friends and I cleaned an event hall. We extracted and then post cimexed. We used the opportunity to make some comparisons between the three machines: Max Heat Butler, Prochem Everest and a Sapphire 570SS. This was a friendly comparison as we worked together under real cleaning conditions. THIS WAS NOT INTENDED TO BE A SCIENTIFIC TEST!
Here are some notes of the conditons we were cleaning under:
1. For comparison, each machine single wanded at the same pressure (450 psi) with the same wand. CMP 14" with 5 02's and a hybrid glide.
2. The Everest used all 2" hose and 125ft of parker solution house.
3. The Butler used 50ft of 2.5" and the remainder 2" hose and 150ft of parker solution hose.
4. The Sapphire 570SS used 50ft of 2.5" and the remainder 2" hose and 100 ft of parker solution hose.
5. It was 33.8F outside.
6. All machines were run on max throttle.
We got to see some pretty consistent results:
1. The Butler clearly had both the greatest lift and airflow at the wand. The Everest and the 454SS seemed comparable.
2. The Butler maintained a constant 200+ at the wand (even though it had 25-50ft more solution hose then the other machines).
3. The 570SS maintained a constant 170F at the wand with very little variation.
4. The Everest maintained and average of 170 F at the wand but for some reason spiked between 160 to 180F.
I don't know what the other units fuel consumption was as only my newer van records how much fuel is used, but the Butler on max used 1.7 gallons per hour on a Chevy Express with the 6.0L engine.
One last observation: The 570SS and the Everest's heat went down when the wand was triggered all the time. The Butler got hotter. Makes me want to try 03's next.
Here are pics of the wand thermometer while using the Butler at repeated intervals:




Here are some notes of the conditons we were cleaning under:
1. For comparison, each machine single wanded at the same pressure (450 psi) with the same wand. CMP 14" with 5 02's and a hybrid glide.
2. The Everest used all 2" hose and 125ft of parker solution house.
3. The Butler used 50ft of 2.5" and the remainder 2" hose and 150ft of parker solution hose.
4. The Sapphire 570SS used 50ft of 2.5" and the remainder 2" hose and 100 ft of parker solution hose.
5. It was 33.8F outside.
6. All machines were run on max throttle.
We got to see some pretty consistent results:
1. The Butler clearly had both the greatest lift and airflow at the wand. The Everest and the 454SS seemed comparable.
2. The Butler maintained a constant 200+ at the wand (even though it had 25-50ft more solution hose then the other machines).
3. The 570SS maintained a constant 170F at the wand with very little variation.
4. The Everest maintained and average of 170 F at the wand but for some reason spiked between 160 to 180F.
I don't know what the other units fuel consumption was as only my newer van records how much fuel is used, but the Butler on max used 1.7 gallons per hour on a Chevy Express with the 6.0L engine.
One last observation: The 570SS and the Everest's heat went down when the wand was triggered all the time. The Butler got hotter. Makes me want to try 03's next.
Here are pics of the wand thermometer while using the Butler at repeated intervals:



