rvr6000
Well-known member
Started to winterize my pressure washer the other night (just got it in April) per the manufacturers recommendation.....use a scrap piece of garden hose, fill it with rv antifreeze and pull the engine over until the antifreeze starts coming out the discharge. This was about 90% pain in the *** as I pulled on that cord til I couldn't feel my arm anymore and I never did see antifreeze come out.
So I improvised a little. I filled the hose with about 12oz of rv antifreeze then used a valve stem (which I usually use for blowing out pipes) on the end of the hose to force the antifreeze into the pump with about 80 lbs of air behind it.
It pushed that small amount of antifreeze thru pretty quickly so just for good measure I repeated the process one more time but with a little less air to make sure some of it stayed in the pump.
I'm confident the pressure washer will be fine for the Minnesota winter coming up but wondering if you guys do anything different.
So I improvised a little. I filled the hose with about 12oz of rv antifreeze then used a valve stem (which I usually use for blowing out pipes) on the end of the hose to force the antifreeze into the pump with about 80 lbs of air behind it.
It pushed that small amount of antifreeze thru pretty quickly so just for good measure I repeated the process one more time but with a little less air to make sure some of it stayed in the pump.
I'm confident the pressure washer will be fine for the Minnesota winter coming up but wondering if you guys do anything different.

. DAMHIK
