Rug doctor - any good ?
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Discussion

Toyless

Original Poster:

25,361 posts

245 months

Monday 13th December 2010
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Following on from my aquarium filter leaking, I now have a large stain on the carpet that needs sorting.

I can rent a Rug Dr thing for about a score - anyone used one, are they any good or shall I just pay for a pro to come round and clean the carpet ?

neilsie

952 posts

270 months

Monday 13th December 2010
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yep, hired one several times to clean cream carpets. Make sure you test it first. Also be prepared for some wool loss.


F i F

48,027 posts

275 months

Monday 13th December 2010
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Also beware using too hot water, the Rug Doctor has some stiff brushes which are designed to vibrate and agitate the carpet and help the cleaning action. If the water is too hot you can sometimes leave tracks in a wool carpet.

Rich135

806 posts

266 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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Worked really well on our wool carpet a few weeks ago (but now we need it again after the wife spilt tea!!).

Re-iterate the warning about water not being too hot (can cause shrinkage). Also, get the hand tool thing, I find that works really well on the main stain spots.

Great Pretender

26,140 posts

238 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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The thread title promised so much...

CatherineJ

9,586 posts

267 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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We use one from time to time having 2 dogs. They are absolutely brilliant.

F i F

48,027 posts

275 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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Rich135 said:
(but now we need it again after the wife spilt tea!!).
Pls report back how you get on, as I tipped a cup of tea over on a cream carpet and despite mopping it all up until kitchen towels could not get anymore it has still left a mark. Tea acts as a dye on natural fibres and a real git to remove.

Where is carpet cleaner when you need him?

thegman

1,928 posts

228 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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My experience was:

- It smelled bad
- It didnt get rid of any bad stains
- It made the carpet a bit cleaner in general


Considering the price once you have included the cleaning fluid and cost to go and get it etc, next time I will be just getting somebody in...

motco

17,387 posts

270 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
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It's good in my experience and the hand tool good on furniture. One caveat, though, is to make sure you thoroughly go over the furniture and don't leave gaps in the passes or you'll have visible stripes. Certainly the fluids are exepnsive but if you use the machine regularly you'll have a rolling stock of the stuff as you won't use it all at once.

pimpin gimp

3,318 posts

224 months

Thursday 16th December 2010
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thegman said:
My experience was:

Considering the price once you have included the cleaning fluid and cost to go and get it etc, next time I will be just getting somebody in...
You must have pretty cheap professionals around your way!

£25 for 24 hours hire, a £6 bottle of fluid cleaned our townhouse carpet perfectly well, they hire them at most supermarkets/diy stores so presume a 20mile max distance to get one - It cost us no more than £35 to do ours, I'd love to see a professional do it for that!