Adam P

  • Posts: 1438
Re: £4k to get into pressure washing. what would you get?
« Reply #20 on: May 17, 2024, 12:11:47 pm »
I'm looking at £4k for everything, and happy to spend less.

Pressure washer machine, fsc, buffer, hoses, attachments, chemicals, x jet or some equivalent, brushes, buckets, it all adds up

Yada Yada Yada - www.m-clean.uk

  • Posts: 401
Re: £4k to get into pressure washing. what would you get?
« Reply #21 on: Yesterday at 10:40:59 am »
Are you going to be putting into one of your 'Mayer' vans on the website, or a separate vehicle?

If using one of your existing vehicles what size tank are you getting because you won't get a large tank in one of those, on top of kit already in there, plus hoses and other pressure washing stuff.

You have been given great advice but what is the vehicle you're working from, what tank do you expect to get in there and what else in that vehicle is 'heavy' kit up against?

Overanalysing PSI against LPM is less important detail, bar pressure and lower flow rate will give you the same end product with less water, possibly.

21LPM is just right for domestic and small commercial but too big to run off a tap (shouldn't be using a direct feed anyway, unless you're getting a yellow Karcher) a buffer tank is required.

Not seen any of this mentioned.

There's probably 750 kilos of kit in the back of my van, then fuel and then water.

If you're taking the machine in and out of the van, by hand, on a ramp, storage for everything?

I tip up on site, doors are flung open, water fill hose (hydrant) attached, HP hose pulled to works and machine switched on, start working away, whether on the ground or elevated, cleaning cladding, whatever - the amount of times people have come up to me, at the back of the van and said, 'any jobs, that looks easy,I could do that'.

It looks easy because of nearly 2 decades of experience, because the set up is nearly perfect  and because the kit gives me the best end result.

Clients expect to see dirty & then clean and if done properly it is always impressive, if done badly it looks worse.

The done properly doesn't happen overnight - the shiny machine will not give you the result, the user will.

This is not an easy add on,

Whatever machine you buy there's a bit more than the 'shiny' kit bit.

Yada Yada Yada - www.m-clean.uk

  • Posts: 401
Re: £4k to get into pressure washing. what would you get?
« Reply #22 on: Today at 04:51:10 pm »
Re-reading this I'm not sure if it comes across as a bit heavy.

It is meant to be informative and to try and show anyone looking at this as an add on that it isn't just 'get a machine'.

I'm the extreme end of works on here, no domestic, no small commercial, all my jobs are hefty and days on end to finish but I had to get to where I am.

I'm certainly not saying that's better than anyone else and for a lot of reasons it isn't.

I've gone through the set ups and different machines and it can be over analysed, cost being the main factor and getting the best machine for the money.

I've only ever bought secondhand machines until the hotbox this year (there was a new Thor in there at one point a long time ago) and they've served me well.

I've done the analysing from a different perspective.

If your'e doing it the way I have or the new machine way you need to be good on the spanners or have service people that can put the machine right, when it goes wrong, because it will and that will be when you don't want it to.

Part of my RAMS shows the service history of the machine in use and because of the clients I have that is  done around 6 monthly.

The two I've got are both diesel and less thirsty than petrol ones (if I don't turn them up to full flow), again - is this a consideration?

I've run them both against the Honda 13 HP 21 LPM and they are quieter , even with bigger engines - my works can be out of hours, can be in front of trading supermarkets, commercial premises but diesel are much more expensive and harder to get, certainly out of the 4K price range, unless it's a Hilta/Yanmar 15LPM, that can be picked up for a couple of grand but don't have the capability to get the job done.

Like this post, it can be overanalysed and then you start scratching your head.

Steve Knight has a machine for sale in the 'for sale section'.  Steve's a carpet cleaner I believe and would have looked after it so maybe worth a message.

Whatever you decide, this can be a very lucrative add on or as people on here have done, made into a full time business.

There's a lot of dirty premises out there.

All the best.