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Sergio

  • Posts: 165
Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #20 on: June 13, 2019, 06:23:31 pm »
I washed oriental handmade wool rugs with Prochem Prespray Gold. I also washed handmade oriental wool rugs with shampoo.
In both cases I used the same mono-brush, in both cases the products made a lot of foam, in both cases I rinsed the carpets with an injection / extraction machine with water and Prochem Fiber & Fabric Rinse. In both cases the result was satisfactory. After these tests, however, I have not yet figured out what is the most suitable product for washing oriental handmade wool rugs. Maybe I should just make an economic assessment?
In the UK, do you generally use prespray or shampoo to wash oriental handmade wool carpets?

I would recommend attending a rug cleaning course, as cleaning rugs seems to be your main source of income.  To answer your question regarding what products are used in the uk it depends very much on the fibre type, construction, stability of dyes, soil type, soil level, customer budget, equipment available, if the rug is cleaned in situ or at a plant, etc ... ... ....

Do you use a spanner or a screwdriver to fix a car? ..... What are more suitable to fix cars with, spanners or screwdrivers?
For example:
An handmade oriental wool rugs (white color inside, red color in the bordure), very dirty, poor color stability, classic dirt caused by foot traffic, no budget limit.
Equipment Available:

Dusting Machine: Sebo BS 360
https://sebo.co.uk/bs36-262/

Agitation machine: MonoBrush Ghibli SB 143 L 13
https://www.ghibliwirbel.com/it/122-SB-143-L-13.html

Injection/Extraction Machine for rinse:  Santoemma Sabrina Maxi
https://www.santoemma.com/default.php?t=ecomm&eid=00003&vimgd=&el1=100&el2=10000&lang=IT

In this theoretical case, which detergent is most suitable?

Robin Ray

Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #21 on: June 13, 2019, 06:52:54 pm »
I washed oriental handmade wool rugs with Prochem Prespray Gold. I also washed handmade oriental wool rugs with shampoo.
In both cases I used the same mono-brush, in both cases the products made a lot of foam, in both cases I rinsed the carpets with an injection / extraction machine with water and Prochem Fiber & Fabric Rinse. In both cases the result was satisfactory. After these tests, however, I have not yet figured out what is the most suitable product for washing oriental handmade wool rugs. Maybe I should just make an economic assessment?


In the UK, do you generally use prespray or shampoo to wash oriental handmade wool carpets?

I would recommend attending a rug cleaning course, as cleaning rugs seems to be your main source of income.  To answer your question regarding what products are used in the uk it depends very much on the fibre type, construction, stability of dyes, soil type, soil level, customer budget, equipment available, if the rug is cleaned in situ or at a plant, etc ... ... ....

Do you use a spanner or a screwdriver to fix a car? ..... What are more suitable to fix cars with, spanners or screwdrivers?
For example:
An handmade oriental wool rugs (white color inside, red color in the bordure), very dirty, poor color stability, classic dirt caused by foot traffic, no budget limit.
Equipment Available:

Dusting Machine: Sebo BS 360
https://sebo.co.uk/bs36-262/

Agitation machine: MonoBrush Ghibli SB 143 L 13
https://www.ghibliwirbel.com/it/122-SB-143-L-13.html

Injection/Extraction Machine for rinse:  Santoemma Sabrina Maxi
https://www.santoemma.com/default.php?t=ecomm&eid=00003&vimgd=&el1=100&el2=10000&lang=IT

In this theoretical case, which detergent is most suitable?

Try both and let us know..

Sergio

  • Posts: 165
Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #22 on: June 13, 2019, 08:23:35 pm »
As I wrote earlier, I've already tried them both. It seems to me with the same results

Jonathan Evans

  • Posts: 264
Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #23 on: June 14, 2019, 02:18:49 pm »
You've already answered your own post. Robin and myself have tried to answer. But you disregard our input and it seems like you are trying to extract the urine, not just from rugs either.

The reason both worked was because both were suitable, there is no 1 product and there are many.

So if you are looking for the best product for the job you already have it.

I am sure you can find something else to add to this thread or argue.

Have a great day.

Sergio

  • Posts: 165
Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #24 on: June 14, 2019, 05:32:52 pm »
You've already answered your own post. Robin and myself have tried to answer. But you disregard our input and it seems like you are trying to extract the urine, not just from rugs either.

The reason both worked was because both were suitable, there is no 1 product and there are many.

So if you are looking for the best product for the job you already have it.

I am sure you can find something else to add to this thread or argue.

Have a great day.
I believe there is nothing wrong with comparing ideas. The forum is not a first aid, question answer, but the forum is a place to find ideas to discuss. My questions wanted to be a starting point for discussion

have a great day

Jonathan Evans

  • Posts: 264
Re: Which one is convenient?
« Reply #25 on: June 14, 2019, 07:52:22 pm »
Oh I see now sorry. I thought you were just asking a question. I see what you mean now. Sorry I misunderstood your thread.
Cheers