Yes 8 a day, on a 9 am start and allways finished before 5 pm. We used at that time a George Holloway dry foam rotary hand held machine, I think its called SPRINT. Loads of draylon, velour suites. Apsolute useless on cotton prints, and businees moved into massive office cleaning contract overnight, at the time so stopped. did the odd one in between.
I see people cleaning suites with HWE and taking 3 or even 4 hours. Used to vacuum suite, then use dry foam machine, I think quickest one ever was 20 minutes for 3 piece suite. Thats why I liked the dry fusion new Cristal machine and want to get back into it. Used to be 9 stone in weight with all the work, and now sadly double that, so hoping getting back into it will help 3 or 4 stone. We used to get loads or repeat work and went to customers for many years , and many times . Very happy with job and still think its the best method, and with the 20 years development with detergents etc. We used to use a Reckits detergent, dry foam, it was blue in colour and smelt beautifull. I did my last suite before Xmas with the above machine, 3 piece suite , bit of aches and pains both during and after, but cleaned the lot in under 1 hour.
Its not a load of bull, could honestly do it, and hope to get upto speed again , if I buy dry fusion cristal machine, or Airtex.
I know prices vary from £15 to £30 per seat for cleaning, but what would you charge with the ability to clean say 4 a day now 20 years older
When first started helping out as a teenager in late 70`s, we charged £25 a 3 piece suite, in Margaret Thatchers early 80`s put offer of £18, because of recession and dole people charging a fiver, with a cheap hydromist. Got loads of work and was usually fully booked for xmas 10 weeks before
idealrob
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