Lee Stockwell
FOJL
For me any "rinse" should not have much detergent characteristic.
Clean rinse on carpets that I don't have to wonder whats under the backing. For the average family home with pets or kids I'll stay with End ZoneSo why are you still using it on "some jobs"?
For the average family home with pets or kids I'll stay with End Zone
Holy crap! 50-60 bucks for a case of rinse??? For a liquid?
Also, wondering the difference between the two? Ones acid, one has encap added??? Anyone tried these?
Good thing I didn't get that 50 lbs of procyon...
Yes, I assumed everyone knew we were talking rinses, but then again I "assumed" that every rinse jug was 5 gal...lol5 gallon jug, right?
Such a pre-spray would need a healthy dose of rinse free additives (typically a phosphate) which helps remove soil into the water stream. True "green" (EPA DfE standards) products will not have phosphates. If you want to eliminate the rinse then you need to add rinse free additives into the pre-spray. Most pre-sprays need a balance of surfactants, solvents and alkaline builders around pH of 10 (can be phosphate) to work consistently. Our Clean Free is soap free and has an abundance of phosphate, and will work in a lot of situations especially if there is pre-existing residue. Great truckmounts can overcome some of the limitations of soap free products as well as cleaning "clean" houses. However, on some jobs you need the surfactants and solvency to get the best results.I'd argue that you should use a pre spray that doesn't need any rinse at all if kids are on the carpet..