Please at a minimum do use a blower to quickly remove most of the water, then a light towel dry. If not the water will attract dust that will remain after water evaporates leaving dust rings, similar to a dirty rain
Out of curiosity, what is the psi and gallons/minute rating of your Worx power cleaner? Do you feel it would be powerful enough to rinse off a very crudy car? Is it heavy? I am considering of of these things for Canadian winters. I would rinse with it outside and follow up with a rinseless wash in my unheated garage. I am considering the Worx and the new 60V Dewalt since I already have some DeWalt tools, but the DeWalt is twice the price here and it looks heavy. Thanks!
hey Bak... I am guessing the worx is only 300 psi and about .5 gallons per minute... the dewalt is more like 1.0 gpm and is probably much better suited for washing in my opinion.. my buddy At Work has DeWalt batteries and was able to get the power pressure washer (tool only) for about $110 on Amazon.. The worx is very light, but it's going to have its limits on how much crud it can blow off, but if you use a chemical as a pre-treat to break the stuff down it will help immensely. Even rinseless as a pre-wash would work.. You're definitely on to something tho for washing in a cold climate! Great method.
I have used that same unit for years and tried it last year for my final rinse with distilled water. Worked great and yes sadly I had a customer that had bad water spots. Turned out the just rinsed the bugs off but did not dry afterwards.
I love where you are going with us. It would be a great idea, especially for a buildup of salt… But I just don't know if it would be aggressive enough and have enough bite to break down the bug guts.
Since my cars are coated. ONR is all I need...Thanks for the video.
Please at a minimum do use a blower to quickly remove most of the water, then a light towel dry. If not the water will attract dust that will remain after water evaporates leaving dust rings, similar to a dirty rain
absolutely valid point ...thanks for watching
Out of curiosity, what is the psi and gallons/minute rating of your Worx power cleaner? Do you feel it would be powerful enough to rinse off a very crudy car? Is it heavy? I am considering of of these things for Canadian winters. I would rinse with it outside and follow up with a rinseless wash in my unheated garage. I am considering the Worx and the new 60V Dewalt since I already have some DeWalt tools, but the DeWalt is twice the price here and it looks heavy. Thanks!
hey Bak... I am guessing the worx is only 300 psi and about .5 gallons per minute... the dewalt is more like 1.0 gpm and is probably much better suited for washing in my opinion.. my buddy At Work has DeWalt batteries and was able to get the power pressure washer (tool only) for about $110 on Amazon.. The worx is very light, but it's going to have its limits on how much crud it can blow off, but if you use a chemical as a pre-treat to break the stuff down it will help immensely. Even rinseless as a pre-wash would work.. You're definitely on to something tho for washing in a cold climate! Great method.
@@waxmanvids5015 Thanks!
I have used that same unit for years and tried it last year for my final rinse with distilled water. Worked great and yes sadly I had a customer that had bad water spots. Turned out the just rinsed the bugs off but did not dry afterwards.
Ever use rinseless in the bucket to pretreat with the hydro shot?
I love where you are going with us. It would be a great idea, especially for a buildup of salt… But I just don't know if it would be aggressive enough and have enough bite to break down the bug guts.
141 TDS? thats nice- in north florida its over 400
yep im a little spoiled up here haha my cr spotless filters go alot further for me too, il thankful thanks for watching!