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I've done it all. (not in a good way either!)Trad for ten years. Then a trolley. Then a backpack on a trolley. Then a 175L in the family estate car.What made it take off for me was buying a Doblo with a 400L in it in 2006. Then when Dan the Man joined me we towed a trailer with 200L in it. Then a 2 man van.But I had a round already.If you are starting out and have "no money" (less than £500) then put barrels in your wagon, put a backpack on a little fold away sack truck, trad some of the downstairs have a part time job and build it up as you canvass.If you "like it" and get through a month or two and can see a future then get a cheap van that will take a 400L tank because when you are proficient (6 months to a year) you will need this for a day's work that will earn you £250 and you don't want to be going home to fill up. You COULD (if you have somewhere to put it) also get a small trailer and put a (say) 200L in the back with a reel and battery as your start up and tow it behind your current wagon. You will have to go home at half time as you get proficient, but you could also put some 25L barrels in your wagon too.Once you "like it" and can see a future a van is definitely the way forward.
if you have no/very little work and limited resources then you cant go wrong with a backpack on a little fold away trolley held on by a bungee cord,a 22 clx,20m of pole hose and four 25L barrels.2 DI VESSELS and a bag of resin,transfer hose etc.you could be up and running with a £500 budget(using your existing van.)and thats buying the above equipment brand new.itll be even less second hand.no point investing much money into it if you have nt any work yet.you might not like it!
Quote from: dazmond on January 03, 2018, 07:21:18 pmif you have no/very little work and limited resources then you cant go wrong with a backpack on a little fold away trolley held on by a bungee cord,a 22 clx,20m of pole hose and four 25L barrels.2 DI VESSELS and a bag of resin,transfer hose etc.you could be up and running with a £500 budget(using your existing van.)and thats buying the above equipment brand new.itll be even less second hand.no point investing much money into it if you have nt any work yet.you might not like it! Disagree daz, if youve decided you are doing it then thats that, no reason not to invest in gear.Liking it has nowt to do with it, its good money for old rope really isnt it. btw my van mount cost less than 500
I love these startup posts with all the focus on tool and never needed advice on finding the customers to pay the way. It always sounds like if you have your backpack you have arrived. Its winter mate, the hardest time in any year to start up.