Can you explain this to me?And heat. Warm water lifts easier than cold.
Can you explain this to me?And heat. Warm water lifts easier than cold.
So, the way I do it is not section by section. I do my wet passes and immediately go over that stroke with my dry passes. I've always done it that way no matter what I am using, is this the proper way?!
The molecules in hot water are moving faster than cold water which makes it move easier and dry faster.Able 1 post: 4412051 said:Can you explain this to me?
Ofer,
My point is, it is harder to take the time to set up with 2.5 or 4 2 door. But then you have guys that take the improved airflow and work even faster, so it kinda kills the whole idea.
I know this maybe a touchy topic, but if you take the time and hassle with the extra steps to do a better job, then work faster, the wand slot hasn't changed or the embedded soils, buy doing these mods and working at the same pace as before the mods, I believe it will help the cleaner do a better job in the end.
The molecules in hot water are moving faster than cold water which makes it move easier and dry faster.
Most pre-sprays are formulated with penetrating agents that allow the water to go deeper. Unlike the common myth, being generous with your pre-spray, does not equate good cleaning. Actually, using the least amount necessary to dislodge (disslove etc.) soil, will be better. Most good cleaners do not put that much pre-spray, as to cause over wetting on its own.I have always thought the water/chems laid down with a hydroforce are often the reason the carpets won't dry quickly. Lots of water laid down on the traffic areas and lots of time to soak down the carpet fiber.
Especially by hacks...
Im used to leaving the water on as I move the wand back n forth with the exception of where I end my back stroke. I hate puddling. Especially when the customer had previously cleaned the carpet themselves - leaving a lot of detergent behind. Id end up with lighter streaks at the overlaps. I wish I could get into the habit of having the water on during the back stroke only then dry forward. That might end up with quicker dry times.
That's true, but usually not an issue, or not worth the hassle.Im used to leaving the water on as I move the wand back n forth with the exception of where I end my back stroke. I hate puddling. Especially when the customer had previously cleaned the carpet themselves - leaving a lot of detergent behind. Id end up with lighter streaks at the overlaps. I wish I could get into the habit of having the water on during the back stroke only then dry forward. That might end up with quicker dry times.
Is that what causes that weird streaking? I've only ever run into that situation a few times and couldn't figure out why it was happening. It's from previous detergent being left in the carpet? The few times it happened I had to clean each room twice, doing a crisis cross pattern. I thought I was doing something wrong.Im used to leaving the water on as I move the wand back n forth with the exception of where I end my back stroke. I hate puddling. Especially when the customer had previously cleaned the carpet themselves - leaving a lot of detergent behind. Id end up with lighter streaks at the overlaps. I wish I could get into the habit of having the water on during the back stroke only then dry forward. That might end up with quicker dry times.
What is hot mop?Ya the puddling on the back stroke, would be the same if you hot mopped it. Or took the vacuum off the wand and just ran steam and chemical into the carpet. Hooked your hose back up then extracted.
Don't tell me you haven't tried that on a grungy area,
Probably puddling isn't so bad if your using an acid rinse more noticeable if your using a good detergent.
If you ever hot mop you better dry stroke!
The wet vacs were ineffective, and quickly replaced by a heavier rinsing drag wand , that created the 1st dirty water recovery for the customer.I also look back in the history of carpet cleaning, my Dad has told me back in the day they would use 175 with solution tanks to apply and scrub the carpet, then they used wet vacs to suck up what they laid down, I bet that carpet was soaked, . . .
Wick back, I think this is a pretty common problem with newer unexperienced cleaners, and we think it happens due to overwetting the carpet. I don't think this is completely true and this is why.
When we do a urine treatment what are we doing? We are instructed to completly soak the trouble spot, and even the pad, then we use sub surface tool to remove the water, to completely flush the area, we even take solution hose with open fitting to apply more water around the subsurface tool to help flush the area. When we are done we have left that area way wetter than any regular carpet cleaning would have done, the backing has been completley soaked, when we do this, and done properly how many of us have had to go back to take care of wicking?
I have had to once or twice but I would bet money that my problems were do to the fact I really didn't completely flush the spots, but for as much of it I have done the returns are minimal for the amount of times I performed this process.
My thought on this goes back to a church I had cleaned, another cleaner had cleaned and spots wicked everywhere, I explained to the customer, that I don't think the last cleaner properly flushed the carpet, and if I cleaned it I didn't think the spots would come back as I would make sure the spots/trouble areas would be properly flushed to get to the bottom of the trouble areas.
I cleaned and did super flush the areas...I know for a fact the backing of the carpet got wet, but I went over the carpet wet and dry tell I was satisfied the spots were cleaned or broke down enough that when it dried there was not enough of what was spilled to cause discoloration it came out great.
So why does VLM work, I think it works on the concept of ONLY cleaning the fibers, and leaving the true problem LOCKED into the backing of the carpet, not enough moisture has penetrated the true spot sitting just below the surface.
So when a HWE guy comes along and puts a ton of pre spray down and quick cleans a carpet they have introduced enough moisture to start to attack the troubled backing and does not take into account the proper flushing to remove it from the backing and therefore the spots start to reappear in a few hours as the carpet starts to dry from the surface pulling the spots to the surface.
That is my diluted belief anyway
Taking the vacuum hose off the wand and running hot steam over an area.What is hot mop?