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Shawn
 
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"Ignoramus17028" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 06 Mar 2005 22:14:27 -0500, john

wrote:
Ignoramus17028 wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/projects/powerwasher/

This is your tax dollars at work. I bought this powerwasher used from
the US military. I suspect that they wrote it off because the gas line
from the tank to the carburetor was rotten and leaking. Why else would
they write it off? If, say, the engine wore down and that was the
reason, the line would not be leaking. I replaced the line and the
engine started on the second pull. It is supposed to be a bad ass
power washer, up to 3,000 PSI, with the Briggs and Stratton 11 HP
Industrial/Commercial engine.

First Question: the engine goes faster and slower every 6 seconds or

so,
maybe varying speed by 30%. Why would that be the case.

Second question: how would I regulate water pressure on this beast?
There is no obvious valve that I could touch. I think that 3,000 PSI
is serious pressure and I want to get some opinions before I start
messing with the pump. Maybe I should torque the nut on top of the
pump, shutting off bypass.

(Click on the thumbnail images to enlarge)


keep a distance from rubber parts and seals on hydraulic cylinders..
also radiators and anything else that 3000 lbs will shread. Get a good
rain suit until you learn how to point that thing.. Watch out for the
corners/


Thanks. My current pressure was way below 3000 psi, and yet I
definitely needed your advice about a rain suit.

I will try playing with higher pressure tomorrow. Unfortunately, the
pressure gauge is missing the pointer, so I cannot know the exact
pressure. I may try to put it apart to see if it can be easily
restored, the pointer is on the bottom of the gauge.

Would it be correct to say that 3000 PSI is supposed to shred wood?

i


A 3000 psi pressure washer is made for cleaning things like heavy equipment,
not really for "around the house" type stuff. Backing off the pressure by
decreasing the spring pressure on the bypass valve would be my
recommendation. When the job calls for it, 3000 psi is great to have, just
hold on to the gun tightly.

Shawn