daugen
Epic Contributor
headed out with a couple bags of recycling, then home to do a little powerwashing of machinery, then
will run some rv antifreeze through the powerwasher. I might use it again after all the leaf blowing is done.
RV antifreeze is cheap compared to the little powerwasher kits you buy with small aerosol cans of antifreeze.
I've tried them, about triple the cost of plain rv antifreeze.
My only concern would be if the aerosol kits have some lubricating ingredient not found in rv antifreeze.
How important is adding extra lube to a 4000 psi pressure pump? Designed of course to run on water, but does
it like a little something extra once in a while? Honda GX390 with Cat pump ?
As the marketers know, I'll likely buy the expensive kit for the expensive pump and let the cheap electric pressure washer I have suck
up some blue rv antifreeze, which it seems to be happy with. That is out on loan to a flood victim, always marvel when it returns still running.
I've burned up a bunch of cheap pressurewashers, this electric one is by AR, the pump company, and so far it has lasted four years, much of it loaned out. I like to use the lower pressure washer on my equipment and only use the high power one when it's really needed. The 4000psi one will peel labels off easily if I'm not careful.
I've always drooled over that Northern Tools pressure washer that's built into the wall, runs off electric, and looks super easy to use.
Doesn't work here because my barn is not heated, though I suppose I could run antifreeze through it also. Otherwise it always seems like I'm unraveling cords that immediately kink on me no matter how carefully I put them away. It becomes a production just using the thing.
I seem doomed every time I look at a garden hose. Kinkfree? not for me. And I use a lot of hose here...which means I spend a fair amount of my life unraveling hoses, saying unkind things about them all the way.
Ultimately I'd like a pressure washer hose on a big reel, with an electric rewind.
Not this Christmas. I already overloaded Santa.
time to go. "rush hour" is now over.
will run some rv antifreeze through the powerwasher. I might use it again after all the leaf blowing is done.
RV antifreeze is cheap compared to the little powerwasher kits you buy with small aerosol cans of antifreeze.
I've tried them, about triple the cost of plain rv antifreeze.
My only concern would be if the aerosol kits have some lubricating ingredient not found in rv antifreeze.
How important is adding extra lube to a 4000 psi pressure pump? Designed of course to run on water, but does
it like a little something extra once in a while? Honda GX390 with Cat pump ?
As the marketers know, I'll likely buy the expensive kit for the expensive pump and let the cheap electric pressure washer I have suck
up some blue rv antifreeze, which it seems to be happy with. That is out on loan to a flood victim, always marvel when it returns still running.
I've burned up a bunch of cheap pressurewashers, this electric one is by AR, the pump company, and so far it has lasted four years, much of it loaned out. I like to use the lower pressure washer on my equipment and only use the high power one when it's really needed. The 4000psi one will peel labels off easily if I'm not careful.
I've always drooled over that Northern Tools pressure washer that's built into the wall, runs off electric, and looks super easy to use.
Doesn't work here because my barn is not heated, though I suppose I could run antifreeze through it also. Otherwise it always seems like I'm unraveling cords that immediately kink on me no matter how carefully I put them away. It becomes a production just using the thing.
I seem doomed every time I look at a garden hose. Kinkfree? not for me. And I use a lot of hose here...which means I spend a fair amount of my life unraveling hoses, saying unkind things about them all the way.
Ultimately I'd like a pressure washer hose on a big reel, with an electric rewind.
Not this Christmas. I already overloaded Santa.
time to go. "rush hour" is now over.