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Pressure Washer

SilverSheep

Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2017
Messages
17
Looking to pick up a pressure washer here sometime soon. I am mainly going to be using it for washing our cars.

Any recommendations? Gas vs Electric?
 
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kd3pc

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 10, 2013
Messages
3,630
Location
Northern Neck
Overkill for car washing, even the little electric ones. It will be hard on finishes and can push water in to places you don't want.

The father in law took the gel coat off his bed top in a fraction of a second, almost new Leonard top...

we use them to take marine growth off boat bottoms, but still need to be careful to not take the good stuff with it.
 

theoldwizard1

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Joined
Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,250
Location
SE MI
I agree that a PW is overkill for car washing. The small, cheap, electric one have a short life (many get left out side over winter and break from ice).

I have heard about these "foam canon" attachments, but I have no idea how well they work.

For "general" home owner use, you need one that can output >2.0 GPM at >2000PSI.
 

fatfillup

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Joined
Jan 17, 2009
Messages
10,338
Location
Finksburg, Md
Hmmmmmmmmm, been selling washers for 34 years to wash most anything that you can get wet and don't have issues IF USED PROPERLY:eyecrazy:

Won't remove paint that is adhering properly unless you really get close and stay there or use a zero degree nozzle.

Most folks don't use proper soap or don't give it proper dwell time and try to blast off the road film.

Biggest question is what is your budget?

Anything under $750 or so is normally not designed to be repairable.
 

dacan23

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Joined
Apr 15, 2014
Messages
2,804
Location
RI
I started out using a small electric one for car washes and light duty tasks. Moved up to a 3500psi generac with a triplex servicable pump. I try to avoid disposable things, all the electric ones and cheaper gas ones are like that as mentioned. Now I use a foam cannon which makes washing easier. Depends on your budget, there are good ones $200-350, but if something breaks is pretty much garbage. Mine was about $600 and came with pro nozzle, gun, and hose.
 
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OP
S

SilverSheep

Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2017
Messages
17
Budget is around 300 bucks. Plan is to use one of those foam cannons honestly.

Sent from my SM-T210R using Tapatalk
 

thatguysb

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Joined
Aug 5, 2015
Messages
178
bought a karcher k2, 1600psi for a great price in my local big box store, def a good unit, had some terrible experiences with earlier models but now it seems like their game stepped up a bit. bought the foam cannon from them also, works great even tho i didnt properly mixed the forumula. Im using some voodoo product
 

Showkey

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Joined
Aug 9, 2014
Messages
8,638
Location
Wausau WI
Hmmmmmmmmm, been selling washers for 34 years to wash most anything that you can get wet and don't have issues IF USED PROPERLY:eyecrazy:
.[/QUOTE


Proper use !!!!!! That's the problem.......seen house brick destroy facing knocked off the brick) , siding and decking damaged beyond repair, water pushed behind the siding on homes, asphalt or wood roofing ( granules knocked off) bearings on ATV and motorcycle destroyed by rust caused by direct high pressure spray passing by the seals, boat gel coat damaged , auto bumper paint, water in automotive electrical connectors ......the list goes on and on.

A novice with 2000-5000 psi can destroy **** in a hurry......:scared::scared::scared:
 

fatfillup

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Jan 17, 2009
Messages
10,338
Location
Finksburg, Md
^^^^^^^^^Yep, proper use:lol_hitti

Keeping the spray directed at something too long is where the problems start and are compounded with using the wrong nozzle. Zero degree nozzles will tear things up quickly.

You mention 5000 psi. I have sold a few but they are not common for general cleaning.

The other factor to consider when destroying things is the volume of water. Pressure is only half the equation. The volume of water comes into play also. Think of 1.5 gpm as a tack hammer and 10 gpm as a sledge hammer. Both can be 1500 psi but one will damage quickly and the other not so much. The weight of the water comes into play.


Now I have heard about water being pushed past seals on motorcylces and atv's. My experience has been in general cleaning and keeping the wand moving, no problems. It does make me wonder about the difference in seals on a M/C verses a truck motor or piece of heavy equipment. The latter are the markets I serve most and folks blast the **** out of them and I have never heard of a problem with anything getting past a seal. Not saying it couldn't happen but I haven't seen it.
 
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