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banter general discussions etc
by Lee_R on Tue Jan 11, 2011 8:50 pm
Evening all. Wanted to pick your collective brains regarding the above. I'm thinking about buying one for cleaning various bits of truck/house and was wondering if any of you had much experience of using them. I've seen a few posts regarding how useful they are, but never used one myself. So can anyone shed any light on the following: -Do the "interior" ones that are retailed in the likes of Argos etc double up for cleaning greasy bits of motor too if they have the right nozzle? -Are they any good for degreasing greasy/oily bits prior to blasting/painting? -What kind of pressure is considered "reasonable/good" in terms of cleaning power (I'm looking at a 3.2 bar model)? Many thanks for any thoughts, and yes, before anyone has a minor coronary...I don't intend on using it in the engine bay "cos that's really bad  " Cheers Lee
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by snapper on Tue Jan 11, 2011 10:05 pm
Be carefull, the last time I used one of those it was to prep a CVRT for painting, it prepped it okay, bugger had half the paint off.
This posting may have been helpfull, on the other hand probably not... Either way, I may have had drink when posting it in which case it's probably not as helpfull as it could have been Work safe, and remember all technical problems can be resolved with a hammer, the trick is knowing where to hit it and how big a hammer to use (I often find it may also help to have a spare bit in the shed to replace the bit you have just mullered  ) Work in Progress (or not as the case may be) I give you.... 'O-no' the truck.Comments on 'O-no' the truck may be left hereWork in Progress (or not as the case may be) I give you.... 'Truck'Comments on 'Truck' the truck may be left hereOwning a 2.8 is a hobby in it's self...
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by Lee_R on Tue Jan 11, 2011 10:10 pm
Cheers Snapper - can you remember if it was just a little domestic units, or was it a proper industrial unit?
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by tws7501968 on Wed Jan 12, 2011 2:47 am
If you mean the glorified pressurised kettle type things like the one gathering dust in a cupboard then I'd say it's far better at gathering dust than removing it. You'd do better holding a greasy thing over an ordinary kettle and blowing at it. Waste of time, effort and money.
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by neal on Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:51 pm
mate of mine as 1 of them jml ones for around the house and says they are good i havent used it myself so can only go on his word
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by snapper on Wed Jan 12, 2011 9:31 pm
This posting may have been helpfull, on the other hand probably not... Either way, I may have had drink when posting it in which case it's probably not as helpfull as it could have been Work safe, and remember all technical problems can be resolved with a hammer, the trick is knowing where to hit it and how big a hammer to use (I often find it may also help to have a spare bit in the shed to replace the bit you have just mullered  ) Work in Progress (or not as the case may be) I give you.... 'O-no' the truck.Comments on 'O-no' the truck may be left hereWork in Progress (or not as the case may be) I give you.... 'Truck'Comments on 'Truck' the truck may be left hereOwning a 2.8 is a hobby in it's self...
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by westo123 on Thu Jan 13, 2011 5:54 pm
It was once said that the Devil would never dare to cross the River Tamar into Cornwall for fear of ending up as a filling in a Cornish Pasty.
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by Lee_R on Fri Jan 14, 2011 7:32 pm
All, many thanks for your comments. Westo and TWS, can you remember what make the glorified kettles were? I was looking at an entry level Karcher model running steam at about 3 bar. Is this the sort of thing you had? Wilberforce - I had for a long time thought steam cleaning and engine bays went hand in hand, and when I first picked up the HOS had intended on doing it to make spotting the many leaks it had a tad easier (exactly as you suggest). It was only after reading several posts on here that I picked up the "that's really bad" vibe as some people seemed to have had issues with electrical contacts - I assume due to the age of the age of the trucks many of us are driving? If that's not the case and this is deemed a generally safe practice maybe I'll go for it after all L
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by tws7501968 on Fri Jan 14, 2011 7:51 pm
*rummages through cupboards*
It's a 3 bar "prolectrix ecoforce" thing with brushes and various nozzle attachments, a window cleaning gizmo and a cleaning cloth. The cloth is the best bit! Only holds 350ml too, so a few good puffs and it's empty again.
A frivolous and wasted £20 impulse purchase that would have been far better spent on a tin of gunk and a toothbrush.
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by inky160 on Mon Jan 17, 2011 5:51 pm
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by Lee_R on Mon Jan 17, 2011 6:30 pm
Cheers all - guess I'm better saving my pennies given your responses!
TWS, thanks for digging yours out for me - it's good to hear the experience you've had with a similarly spec'd model.
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by westo123 on Thu Jan 20, 2011 5:34 pm
It was once said that the Devil would never dare to cross the River Tamar into Cornwall for fear of ending up as a filling in a Cornish Pasty.
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