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Poll

DIY - Is it worth it?

Yes
75.9%
60 (75.9%)
No
20.3%
16 (20.3%)
Don't Know
3.8%
3 (3.8%)

Total Members Voted: 75

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #20 on: December 02, 2008, 06:13:06 pm »
Their will be a majority leaning from those using this forum towards DIY. This is because those who take the time to come online and research are usually looking for alternatives to the glossy one stop companies that are in the market place.

The vast majority of WC'ers however are more than happy to buy off the shelf, because they just want to work with the least hassle and thought.

Do you have any evidence for this assertion?

Why, do you have evidence to the contrary?  :)

No, but I'm not making any assertions. You are.

So again. Do you have any evidence for what you say?

cherubs cleaning

  • Posts: 724
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #21 on: December 02, 2008, 06:43:16 pm »
I employ and have 6 x DIY Wfp set ups in  my vans
Of course if money was no option I would have nice
shiny systems in the vans.
Russ 
 
 
i argee whith russ


diy is good for some things but not everyting



jerry

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #22 on: December 02, 2008, 07:16:03 pm »
I think that we need to bear the phrase "fit for purpose" in mind.

A good example of this is the gutter inspection kit that we use. KevR has particular requirements and uses a very expensive and technically advanced camera system.

I work on domestic properties only and i use a motorcycle rear-view mirror on a Harris pole.

Kev's camera wouldn't suit me. My mirror wouldn't suit Kev.

Neither one is intrinsically superior, but they are both suited to a particular requirement.

My own opinion is that DIY is fine for certain things using simple technology, and is superior in many cases where simplicity is a virtue.

NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #23 on: December 02, 2008, 07:49:20 pm »
Fitted system but DIY hot water system,i saved over 3k and if i want it will go hotter.

dai

  • Posts: 3503
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #24 on: December 02, 2008, 07:54:43 pm »
My DIY system was built according to the needs of my round.I have made modifications along the road, and I believe I have the best trolley system for my requirements, my mini hook on pump box is as compact as it gets with the pump and Varistream in it.
Three years last August and still going strong, one or two 25 litre containers on board, and carries two poles.
I have had people stop to take photo's of it on at least 5 occasions, not bad for a scrap yard challenge, and if something does go wrong, I will know how to fix it.
I love DIY.

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #25 on: December 02, 2008, 08:03:48 pm »
Another point worth bearing in mind is that very many inventions were born in a DIYer's mind and hands.

Michael Faraday was a DIY scientist in his early life. Charles Darwin was a DIY scientist for his entire life as far as I can see. Isaac Newton made many of his own telescopes.

DIY has a long and noble history.

Who put the very first wfp kit together?
Who made the first trolley system?
Who converted the first Bentley brush or Salmon brush?
Who was the first to use IPA as an additive to pure water?

I don't know the answers to any of these questions - but I'm pretty sure that at least a couple of them were DIYers.

The mocking voices are missing a rather important point.

Newton extended the work of many great scientists and said: If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.

If you are now enjoying the benefits of ready-made kit, it is because you are benefitting from the labours of those who put a great deal of passionate thought, time and skill into developing the kit in the first place.

NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #26 on: December 02, 2008, 08:07:58 pm »
To someone who knows nothing about WFP it looks a nightmare i would think although building a straight forward cold setup is easy even if you have very basic knowledge when it comes to DIY,it looks far more complicated than it is to build.

Alex Gardiner

  • Posts: 7744
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #27 on: December 02, 2008, 08:20:32 pm »
Their will be a majority leaning from those using this forum towards DIY. This is because those who take the time to come online and research are usually looking for alternatives to the glossy one stop companies that are in the market place.

The vast majority of WC'ers however are more than happy to buy off the shelf, because they just want to work with the least hassle and thought.

Do you have any evidence for this assertion?

Why, do you have evidence to the contrary?  :)

No, but I'm not making any assertions. You are.

So again. Do you have any evidence for what you say?


Hi Wally

First of all I am not knocking DIYers as I myself am one (including all my poles, brushes, etc).

Regarding my earlier post, I have no 'evidence' as such - scientists haven't done many studies on this subject!  It's just my observation of our sales based on the percentage of forum users and what they buy compared to the much larger percentage of non-forum users and what they buy.

Apologies if you thought my comments were in any way didactic, mis-leading or presumptuous.

matt

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #28 on: December 02, 2008, 08:52:46 pm »
You’re of the point Wally; DIY is fine up to a point but ultimately good business practice dictates that it doesn’t become financially viable.

In most cases I can see that it would be better to just be a little patient and go and earn the money to buy the item and add something to your business.

The time it would take me to source the parts and make a gutter scoop, I could earn several hundred pounds cleaning gutters, and that’s a simple tool.

There will always be a certain amount of other work that doesn’t involve cleaning windows and making money.




BUT

sometimes a "tool" isnt available off the shelf, for example the Zen-flex Fishing pole, if your after a VERY light pole ( and can spare 10 mins of your time ) then you have the Zen-flex ( i know some1 will point me towards the SL2 ( i think thats the modular pole ) which i guess its in the same weight class, but to save your self X amount of money for 10 mins of your time, i cannot see the issue

NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #29 on: December 02, 2008, 08:54:33 pm »
Trust me Kevin when i tell you that what you think is tennis elbow probobly isn`t,i suffered for over a year and it wasn`t tennis elbow it was back related and not due to poles etc.If you need to talk let me know,the magician of a woman fixed it in about 5 visits.

matt

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #30 on: December 02, 2008, 08:56:42 pm »


I suffer from tennis elbow in both arms. It comes from using large heavy poles on repetitive commercial jobs. I now have a SL2. Thanks to Alex and his R & D my tennis elbow hardly ever happens anymore. Now if it wasn't for Alex and his DIY in the beginning I would not have the benefit of the pole.



so for your tennis elbow you buy the SL2

for my neck pain, i use the RT Zen-flex

both have the same effect, your tennis elbow goes, my neck pain goes

yet last night you called me a idiot because i DIY'ed

seems foolishly hypocritical to me

NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #31 on: December 02, 2008, 09:03:44 pm »
The SL2 will stand up to the job but these other converted fishing poles are just not strong enough day in day out i`ve used them and snapped sections with no effort and not by using brut force either,i know there the cheap option for some but i wouldn`t dare use them near members of the public due to them being unpridictable and so weak.In most situations a tele pole is far easier and safer under 30ft or so.

s.w.c

  • Posts: 1174
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #32 on: December 02, 2008, 09:13:38 pm »
when i first ever looked at this site some long time back, the thoughts a lot of you had to the original super lite maver pole amazed me but now quite a few of you now use the sl2 and this is down to Alex and Jeff doing there diy, now not to many of you know me on here but some will know me from around other forums as smithy, Ive done a lot of diy over some years myself and there is a lot to be learnt from it, and the stuff learnt can be passed on to yourselves and to the likes of Alex etc, the industry would not be where it was if someone some where didn't do some diy and come up with the first system or poles they just didn't appear ,

Glyn H

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #33 on: December 02, 2008, 10:32:50 pm »
Quote
Who made the first trolley system?
Omnipole in 1999

ftp

  • Posts: 4694
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #34 on: December 03, 2008, 08:00:39 am »
You’re going into the realm of research and development and invention.

You have to keep your focus, if you are intending to run a window cleaning business.

The best thing for about DIY is the educational aspect it can give you, I don’t think the saving money part is great, helpful yes but if you can wait you will be able to get the money anyway.

Manufactures are getting more competitive with there prices, so being more business minded will be more useful than being able to build your own system.




I think you'll find the savings can be very big to anyone starting out. New Van and system could cost as much as £25000 a second hand van and diy could be a third or less. A diy pole could be £60 for lightweight carbon modular or about £400 for something better. A guttervac could be £1000 less if you diy.  Heater systems too are far less .Pretty big savings for anyone starting out if you ask me.


Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #35 on: December 03, 2008, 09:36:33 pm »


...

You have to keep your focus, if you are intending to run a window cleaning business.

...


I'm not absolutely sure of this, but wasn't Andrew McCann a window cleaner? I think he has focus.

And what about Alex Gardiner? He's a window cleaner, isn't he? And doesn't he have focus?

Focus is fine, and very valuable, Ewan. But it isn't sufficient by itself. You also need to have a zoom lens.

Sometimes you need to zoom in and look at the very fine detail. At other times you need to zoom out and look at the bigger picture to see how all the elements fit together.

Most people are naturally inclined to think either zoom out or zoom in - big picture or fine detail.

The very smartest people have trained themselves to zoom in and out all the time. They look at the big picture and then decide where it can be improved. They then zoom in and work on that specific detail, all the time zooming in and out to check that things are still fitting together. That's how systems are created - as systems are made up of interlinking parts.

It strikes me, Ewan, that your focus is on the detail. Try zooming out and seeing the bigger picture.

(Academics are very often mocked for their specialisations and lack of ability to zoom out. The joke is that they learn more and more about less and less until they know everything about nothing.)

WCE

  • Posts: 968
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #36 on: December 03, 2008, 09:44:16 pm »


Pat testing, which I am also qualified to do... How many of you out there PAT Test your equipment either by yourselves or get another company to do that.

Pat testing what exactly? If you have pat certs for your poles then you must not be qualified. Being serious I cant see much apart from maybe a battery charger that is pat testable so what are you on about? Now if  it was my other business we were talking about (entertainments agency Mobile discos, bands etc) then that would be a different story Not having a go just wondered! ;)
WCE- For Windows that shine everytime!

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #37 on: December 03, 2008, 10:11:24 pm »
Yes and no.

Where things don't exist like a hot on demand system, electric reel, and remote ground operated gutter tools I have invented them.

I pretty much use only the very best components though- such as a rinnai heater and not a made in hong cong gone wrong toy.Many of the pro set ups use stinky diesel and are very inefficent. My system is miles better.

Ditto for the electric reel, i've heard there is one for £850, but i've not heard of anyone who's got one and so knowing some of the issues i don't believe it would work anyway. My electric reel does work and unlike the hot system I can't see any problems with employees using one (i've got two).In fact it would increase productivity on repeat domestics to an incredible degree.

However, where something already exists- like george or an xtel pole i don't kid myself that I could better these because so many' brains' have already cracked the problems. But even here paul (george) seems to respond well to being nagged and has intro'd a cash in hand figure, and the unger is better than the xtel (go on ask me why? and while we are on the subject how good would the slx be if they got hold of that? ;D)


NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #38 on: December 03, 2008, 10:31:00 pm »
Discount what heater do you use,i rang up about 1 like yours and it was about £219 does that sound like the 1 you have with a push button ignition.

Re: DIY - Is it worth it?
« Reply #39 on: December 04, 2008, 09:56:11 pm »
rinnai 54 eu(from memory) i paid a bit more. Yes push button ignition pilot light.Over a year and no problems. I do use car radiator hose on the hot out. I do have a bypass back to the tank controlled by a tap.(the bypass is especially usefull on these cold nights- i can take the pressure out of the reel by turning the tap and i can get the heater going by running straight into the tank. Last year a couple of mornings the hose and pole were frozen (think nights of minus ten) I ran the hot for a few minutes then put it into the hose. I had to do this several times but after about ten or fifteen minutes everthing worked. Compare this with guys who had to wait for mid day for things to thaw or didn't work at all.

The flow rate is quite high admittedly but I work fast and this helps.This is one of my disagreements with Nathaneal, i would never tamper with internal factory preset safety features.

As things get colder use the bypass to release the pressure, diconnect the two hoselocks and take the drain screw out so that it doesn't freeze up and break.This heater is a bomb proof tank and will never give you any problems, mostly you will use it on the minimum settings.