Pressure washers - what's the point?

Pressure washers - what's the point?

Author
Discussion

hotchy

4,471 posts

126 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Clean my drive with it, makes a cracking good job. I just use a hose on my car.

GarageQueen

Original Poster:

2,295 posts

246 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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mwstewart

7,608 posts

188 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I personally don't put them anywhere near a car. Good for cleaning the Patio though smile

skyrover

12,671 posts

204 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Blasting mud off the land rover
Cleaning equipment
Cleaning the patio/garden path
Cleaning crick walls
Cleaning garden furniture
Cleaning anything else I can lay my hands on

J4CKO

41,565 posts

200 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I find mine great for cleaning the muck off the path and depositing it on everything else.

They are great, but are no substitute for a proper wash, if I am lazy, on really manky wheels, a bit of Wonder wheels and then jetwash does a passable job, I keep it away from paint as it is great at blasting it off, good at cleaning under wheelarches.

Boobonman

5,655 posts

192 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Essential for cleaning mud from 4x4s that have been used as intended, otherwise you end up spending an absolute fortune at the jet wash at the petrol station...

iloveboost

1,531 posts

162 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Domestic pressure washers don't seem to have the power they need. The pressure is so poor on anything 'domestic' I've used or bought even the Nilfisk and Karcher ones.
I think the main advantage of a domestic pressure washer is that you can lift light dirt and clean the car a bit before you use a sponge on it. That means you are less likely to scratch the paint and you can use the pressure washer to help keep the sponge/s clean as well. They are still bad though and I'd recommend spending hundreds on a 'professional' pressure washer or not buying one.
Edited to add:
On muddy vehicles I'd guess even a domestic would be better than just a hosepipe, etc.

C. Grimsley

1,364 posts

195 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I swear by mine, it's an industrial hot washer but as with any thing use it with common sense and they are fine.
Some of the cars we get in our garage without a jet wash you really wouldn't get involved with the courtesy wash, they are doing 20,000miles without a wash.


Carl

Centurion07

10,381 posts

247 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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powerstroke said:
Centurion07 said:
plenty said:
They're for getting the top layer of grit and dirt off the car before you hand wash.

If you dive straight in with your bucket without pressure-washing your car first, you're basically rubbing the grit into your paintwork.
What do you think you're doing firing a high-pressure jet of water at it then? confused
What he is doing is rinsing grit off not driving it into the
Paintwork!!!
,success with a pressure washer is about the chemical
A good TFR will get most of the dirt off then a quick hand wash with a hand wash wax and a soft sponge is best ,any manual washing of a dirty car with a brush or sponge will cause scratches...
If you'd care to point out where he mentioned anything about TFR in his first post I'm all ears...

If you jetwash a filthy car without applying anything to it beforehand, it will remain dirty because it's "bonded" to the car, so all you've done is apply pressure to that layer of crap, not rinsed it away, which is not good for your paintwork.

powerstroke

10,283 posts

160 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Centurion07 said:
If you'd care to point out where he mentioned anything about TFR in his first post I'm all ears...

If you jetwash a filthy car without applying anything to it beforehand, it will remain dirty because it's "bonded" to the car, so all you've done is apply pressure to that layer of crap, not rinsed it away, which is not good for your paintwork.
you do whatever makes you happy !!!!!!!

Pothole

34,367 posts

282 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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plenty said:
When doing the dishes you run them under the tap before attacking with the scourer - it's the same principle.
No, no I don't.

steviegunn

1,416 posts

184 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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hotchy said:
Clean my drive with it, makes a cracking good job. I just use a hose on my car.
This ^^

BFG TERRANO

2,172 posts

148 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I have a honda jet washer and it's a great bit of kit. Rarely used on the car, only for an annual underside blast to remove salt. If the car gets really dirty I use it first to get the worst off but always with caution at a distance. It will never replace a bucket and sponge!

Great for the path, drive and patios in the spring. Particularly after the grime and slime build up from a mild wet winter.

TimJMS

2,584 posts

251 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Yes. Great for cleaning the terrace. That is all.

Pothole

34,367 posts

282 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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littleredrooster said:
paintman said:
A certain Midlands Police force had a LOT of wheel bearing failure caused by water ingress problems with BMW bikes. The supplying dealer was completely stumped.
BMW sent a technician to investigate. He couldn't understand it either.
It wasn't until he saw the bikes being washed at end of shift that he realised that the problem was caused by pointblank use of a pressure washer. The seals are intended to cope with normal driving conditions, not high pressure water jets.
Advice to the section ensured the problem didn't recur.
...and yet RiDE magazine (? - IIRC) put a 2RS (i.e. double-sided rubber seal, as used in most m/cs) wheel bearing in a vice and tried to blow the grease out of it with a pressure washer. They tried both hot and cold for about an hour and pulled the seal out of the bearing afterwards to find...perfect grease and no water ingress.

Would be interesting to know which force, as I have had very close contact with some of them for a few years and could perhaps get more details of this phenomenon.
Isn't this just an apocryphal story, much like the tyre mould release compound malarkey? Anyone you actually know and trust ever had this issue? Almost all bike dealers jetwash used stock when it comes in....I don't know anyone who has ever had a dry bearing for this reason on any bike.

Slobberchops

3,619 posts

201 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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GC8 said:
If we are washing cars with a pressure washer then you do it as follows. wet the car, then work in a TFR solution with a soft brush, then pressure wash off.

A pressure washer that can strip your paint wont move road dirt without TFR. Even a steam cleaner cant.
Brush would damage the paint.

GC8

19,910 posts

190 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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Yes, it was lorry cleaning advice really. TFR is far better if it is agitated though.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I took the Landie to the polish blokes a few years back. They did a good job of cleaning it but when I got home I found their pressure washer had removed the lacquer from 2 of the wheels and the "Discovery" badge on the back. Most expensive car wash I've ever had!

Using my own pressure washer, I also successfully removed a large strip of black paint from my motorbike's swing arm so can assure you they do remove paint rather well.

I now wash my cars/bike myself and only use a hose. Pressure washers are evil!

Centurion07

10,381 posts

247 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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powerstroke said:
Centurion07 said:
If you'd care to point out where he mentioned anything about TFR in his first post I'm all ears...

If you jetwash a filthy car without applying anything to it beforehand, it will remain dirty because it's "bonded" to the car, so all you've done is apply pressure to that layer of crap, not rinsed it away, which is not good for your paintwork.
you do whatever makes you happy !!!!!!!
Not damaging my paintwork makes me so happy so thanks, I will! smile

GC8

19,910 posts

190 months

Saturday 19th April 2014
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I pressure washed an '86 Escort once.