Clean It Up
UK General Cleaning Forum => General Cleaning Forum => Topic started by: clarkson on July 20, 2017, 08:09:07 am
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hi guys
We where asked for a day rate for a guy and a pressure washer.
When our guy got to site it was cladding that was dusty as a new build . We where subbing so this hadn't been mentioned.
Looked easy , so. Cold water pressure washed it carefully rinsing . Dust was all running of fine .
When it dried however it dried all dusty and smeary again , so rinsed again . Smeary again.
We had 500 litres of wfp water with us so rinsed the whole thing again , smeary again.
Time was up , main contractor not happy with results , our parent contractor worried his client isn't happy.
We on the other hand have done what we where commissioned to do , above and beyond.
Firstly just venting not going to go on a site again on man and machine basis , we are. being held responsible to get the cladding clean when the main contractor didn't spec things right.
Secondly anyone got a solution to get first clean dust of efficiently so I can correct it .
Thought about soft washing it but don't want to waste the time if it's not going to clear the dust .
Maybe TFR?
Any thoughts
Cheers
John
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Not wanting to appear argumentative, but you stated dust removal - yet you still have dust left ? Correct ? How is that above and beyond ?
Personally I never do day rates and secondly always check out the site and produce a world order to specify exactly what is to be cleaned and what is to be the expected result.
Depending on the cladding type, I have found water fed pole scrubbing to the the absolute best for dust/algae removal with no residue - you can't beat physical contact of the brush.
Pw is great for a lot of things but this type of work you need to get really close to every inch of the cladding otherwise it just leaves dirt behind
Darran
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Hi smudger
My point is we where sent to go over the cladding on a day rate for pressure washing . The site manager made the decision that's what he wanted .
As you say brushing down with wfp is more effective , so his remit was wrong.
If he had said I have some very dusty cladding He wanted cleaning , it would have been totally our responsibility to make sure it was clean , but then I , as you say would have inspected it and worked on price to get a good result.
I was asked to rinse it once , he thought it would work . it hasn't but we have done what we said we would do actually 3 times. And wfp once so that's four times what was agreed.
I won't do day rates again myself . The problem is they don't know what they actually need.
Will try wfp it again a few times. See if it comes up better
John
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Personally I always go and look at the job as the customer isn't always the best person to decide how a certain surface is cleaned , I would have looked at it and given them options Evan tyred a patch with the pole to see what it looked like , this type of situation is a problem when sub contracting you have done as you were asked but it's not a suitable method for the job , unfortunately you are left with an unhappy customer and out of pocket trying to sort it out 😬😬😬😬
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I have a job, there's loads of building work going on. Guys asks me to clean some rollers shutters covered in building dust.... Now shutters are a doddle to clean wfp so thinks ye ok will take about hour or so.
These shutters have millions of little holes in them ( must be for letting light in or Sutton ) but didn't think anything of it.
F me ..... I cleaned them good and proper, looked great when wet, but next day I sees them and thinks hmmm they a bit shuddy so does them again, and again and they still dried crap 😤🔫
I got them to acceptable standard but had to have a guy doing insides while I was outsides bringing both sides down together, but was a bugger to do