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new2detailinginnj
10-19-2008, 06:58 PM
Since I am a newbie I just wanted to know if any of you detailers use a pressure washer as part of you routine? I have heard some good things and some not so good things about pressure washers. If I do get a pressure washer it will have to be electric. Your views and opinions would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

Rich

robb01
10-19-2008, 07:14 PM
Ive never used one, and don't think there is a real need for one. I rinse the car thoroughly, wash, and rinse off. I think the risk of damage is higher w/ a concentrated pressure of water

Emile
10-19-2008, 10:55 PM
I think a foam gun from Autogeek would be a lot cheaper and just as effective as it allows you to spray the soap/water mixture very easily at hard-to-reach places.

A pressure washer is fine as long as you know how to use it, but I would smack somebody silly if they ever tried to use one on my car.

WindyCity
10-20-2008, 08:50 AM
I would smack them TOO!!! especially if he tried to use it on the engine!!!!

Electric pressure washers are better for cars because they dont have the power that gas units have, I have one, however the time it takes to set it up, break it down isnt just isnt worth it. You still have to scrub the car and the rims to get it clean. In the past I have rarely used it on cars, however I just purchased a foam cannon and it is pretty cool so I might use the pressure washer to soap it up then I will carry on with a conventional wash.

ss-truck
10-20-2008, 12:13 PM
A pressure washer is dangerous on paint . I use one when I am getting ready to paint to remove any trash and possibly loose paint . I have seen lots of paint come off with a pressure washer . To use in very dirty wheel wells would be Ok but for me NO further .

heatgain
10-21-2008, 09:22 AM
I use a PW for to get red clay off paint on the lower half of vehicles, for wheel wells and tires, and on engines. Haven't had one problem.
The trick is to use your common sense. DO NOT get too close to anything with the tip of the PW, or your paint will peel off like a brown banana skin.
My PW is an electric, 1700psi. I'd be afraid to use a gas powered, higher pressure PW.

Bert31
10-21-2008, 11:58 AM
The trick is to use your common sense.

Amen


DO NOT get too close to anything with the tip of the PW, or your paint will peel off like a brown banana skin. My PW is an electric, 1700psi. I'd be afraid to use a gas powered, higher pressure PW.

Using a gas pressure washer is fine so long as it has a "fan" feature. In other words, it has a setting where the water doesn't come out like a jet, rather in a fan "V" shape which is safe on paint.

I have borrowed a pressure washer before and if I ever buy one, I would get a gas one for two reasons; 1) they tend to be much more reliable than the electric Husky or Karcher's (hence their higher price) and 2) the gas ones generally have a fitting to fit a Cam Spray foam cannon and the electric ones generally do not.

loudog2
10-21-2008, 01:35 PM
I use my gas troy built 2500psi after polishing. It comes with 4 tips. one is a gentle automobile washing tip. I use it to get all the dust out of the crevaces, wash wheel wells and rims. Don't really use it to wash the paint, except on my work truck, which the company owns.

wagonproject
10-21-2008, 06:30 PM
I have 3, all gas. Bought 2 at swap meets as they were like new. I think 2 are 3500 psi and ones 3000 psi. There nice and I try to use them every detail I do correction work on to start. But on some cars just ONR. I've been thinking about the cam spray electric one as a electric one would be so much nicer. And like others have said just use common sense with, don't put it a inch away from your paint and expect it to be safe. I use it on everything, motors, wheel wells, door jambs, the whole car, lol. And usually you have different heads (like from a straight line to a fan spray of like 45 or so).

ss-truck
10-21-2008, 09:59 PM
On most of the cars I buy to sell I put them on the lift and walk under them with 3500 psi gas PW and clean the underside real good . amazing what changes it will make and potential buyer view points of clean under body and wheel wells .

builthatch
10-21-2008, 10:05 PM
Electric pressure washers are better for cars because they dont have the power that gas units have,

ha...last weekend i busted out the trusty husky electric washer i've used for the last several years so i could clean all of my curbs and sidewalk, patio furniture, etc before winter and while playing with the dog, and the gun on the farthest from fan setting, the thing just tapped my palm and obliterated it. it gave me a super bloody deep gash about an inch and a half long. it barely brushed my hand....

but yeah, no need to use such a thing on vehicle but maybe a truck that sees heavy mud action or boat release, etc.

Showroom Shine
10-22-2008, 06:27 AM
I feel a pressure washer is an added bonus for my situation. I'm a mobile detailer,I do not have a building. When I arrive at a client's vehicle a have a pressure washer, heated extractor, generator,wet dry vac,Flex, Rotory, 60 gals. water,and chemicals. I find it very hard to remove some of the dirt on 3 specific areas. Wheel wells, baked on brake dust on wheels, (rims) grim on tires. I have most of the latest products on AG and other sites. But sometime the pressure washer cuts my time down. Especially with large trucks, vans, and muddy undercarriages.