Ever-Fresh
Member
Has anyone ever experimented with de-ionized water for the cleaning process for carpet?
Thanks for testing it out for me! I kind of figured that I was not the first to consider it.Yes. Then went to RO water. We owned a car wash for a decade. Spot free rinse is necessary.
Tried to apply the ultra clean rinse (RO/DI) in our butler units, cleaned and rinsed carpets great. But is was not that large a difference for the extra equipment and costs involved. To get RO or DI water was extremely waste full. The units used 15 gallons to create 10 or less gallons of purified water. AND heat destroys the created RO water. Good stuff but not feasible in carpet cleaning. But I tried...
Back in the 1990’s there was a bulletin board called ICS. Mikey was a real jerk on there and was among a wide assortment of kooks. Everybody had a PhD in carpet cleaning and designed rocket motors on the side. Some of them claimed RO water rinses were as necessary as a glide is today.Since I did not ever see it as a subject or topic, I kind of figured that the benefits are not a game-changer. In my mind however, I always wondered "what if?"
The better the water the less it is already clogged-up with minerals so cleaning solutions should work better, but how much? Apparently not much.
I remember the ICS board! I remember reading it in 2003-2004 as I considered getting into carpet cleaning! I also remember the controversy, not what it was about, but personality conflicts.Back in the 1990’s there was a bulletin board called ICS. Mikey was a real jerk on there and was among a wide assortment of kooks. Everybody had a PhD in carpet cleaning and designed rocket motors on the side. Some of them claimed RO water rinses were as necessary as a glide is today.
I just replaced my filter this morning because it had that red clay stain all over itJust one of the reasons I carry water. We still have those customers on well water.
2000's, ratherBack in the 1990’s there was a bulletin board called ICS
Both2000's, rather
Mayhaps he didn't get admitted till the 2000's; at least Floorpro held the lineBoth
Try not being a know-it-all