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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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#1
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I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for
sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. |
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#3
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![]() "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message link.net... wrote: Even an old man with prostate trouble peeing on the side of the building will be more effective than a 1500 PSI unit. Yes, I second the suggestion for using the old man. The acid in the pee is surprisingly effective, and you can rent one just about anywhere. |
#4
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![]() "Jerry S." wrote in message ... "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message link.net... wrote: Even an old man with prostate trouble peeing on the side of the building will be more effective than a 1500 PSI unit. Yes, I second the suggestion for using the old man. The acid in the pee is surprisingly effective, and you can rent one just about anywhere. I like low tech, economical solutions. But this approach does seem problematic. |
#5
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FWIW my $70 low-end wallmart unit ended up in the trash because it did not
have enough oomph to be good for much of anything. Rent at least once to get a feel for what a washer can do. -Steve wrote in message ups.com... I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. |
#6
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Even an old man with prostate trouble
Have prostate, will travel wire Mike in Arkansas, San Fransisco |
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#8
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#9
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"Lee Michaels" wrote:
"Jerry S." wrote in message ... "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message link.net... wrote: Even an old man with prostate trouble peeing on the side of the building will be more effective than a 1500 PSI unit. Yes, I second the suggestion for using the old man. The acid in the pee is surprisingly effective, and you can rent one just about anywhere. I like low tech, economical solutions. But this approach does seem problematic. And spendy. Just think of the outlay for beer. |
#10
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I tried a low cost washer like you described for the same application you
are planning. I found it not to be any more useful than the water coming from a garden hose. I then borrowed a 2400 pound machine from a friend and was successful. Don Dando wrote in message ups.com... I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. |
#11
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Robatoy wrote:
I rented a 10 HP Honda powered 3000 psi unit last summer...NOW you're talking. Blew the paint and rust off the railing on my front porch. Perfect! That one liked to cut wood too... so I guess we're still on topic? A 1500 will cut softwood. DAMHIKT. |
#13
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![]() "Don Dando" wrote in message .. . I then borrowed a 2400 pound machine from a friend and Wow, did it come on a trailer? LOL Some one was going to ask it. |
#14
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I agree with the respondents that the 1500psi ones are crap.
How about buying a 2400+ psi unit? 3 years ago my neighbor & I bought a Karcher 2400psi w/ a Honda engine at Costco for $300. I figure I'm at payback (vs rental) already. There's now no pressure(no pun intended) to hustle thru the job and return a rental unit. In addition to washing the house: Cleaning and/or stripping the deck. Annual blasting the winter moss from the driveway. Cleaning the mud from the toys - quads, M/Cs, etc Degrassing the underside of the lawnmower. Peeling the bark(and mud, grit, whatnot) off of logs/wood before running them thru the saw/jointer/planer. Etc, etc, etc. You'll be surprised at how many uses you can think of for your new "toy". Art wrote in message ups.com... I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. |
#15
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![]() wrote in message Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Neighbor have one? Does he use that particular commodity accepted around the world for negotiations and settlement of accounts ---- the six pack? |
#16
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On Mon, 27 Jun 2005 14:42:47 -0400, the opaque "Jerry S."
spake: "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message hlink.net... wrote: Even an old man with prostate trouble peeing on the side of the building will be more effective than a 1500 PSI unit. Yes, I second the suggestion for using the old man. The acid in the pee is surprisingly effective, and you can rent one just about anywhere. How much do you guys pay these old men who are full of pee? Do you just pick them up out of the gutters Downtown every morning, or what? - DANCING: The vertical frustration of a horizontal desire. --------------------------------------------------------- http://diversify.com Full Service Web Programming |
#17
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Thanks, everyone, you saved me $70. Maybe I'll try the peeing
suggestion myself before renting the HD unit, but the neighbors probably won't appeciate the sight of me on the ladder trying to get at the high spots near the roof ![]() Question - how many hours does it typically take to pressure wash an average sized, one story house, including a patio? I'm thinking 5 to 6 hours at most. |
#18
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How much do you guys pay these old men who are full of pee?
Do you just pick them up out of the gutters Downtown every morning, or what? Hey! |
#19
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On 27 Jun 2005 16:14:43 -0700, the opaque "Mike in Arkansas"
spake: How much do you guys pay these old men who are full of pee? Do you just pick them up out of the gutters Downtown every morning, or what? Hey! "Hey!" is not your rate of pay. So what izzit? ![]() -- A lot of folks can't understand how we came to have an oil shortage here in America. Well, there's a very simple answer...nobody bothered to check the oil; We just didn't know we were getting low. The reason for that is purely geographical - our OIL is located in Alaska, California, Oklahoma and Texas. Our DIPSTICKS are located in Washington, DC. |
#21
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In article .com,
wrote: Thanks, everyone, you saved me $70. Maybe I'll try the peeing suggestion myself before renting the HD unit, but the neighbors probably won't appeciate the sight of me on the ladder trying to get at the high spots near the roof ![]() Question - how many hours does it typically take to pressure wash an average sized, one story house, including a patio? I'm thinking 5 to 6 hours at most. Another alternative -- a plain old garden hose, maybe with a detergent sprayer attached, and something like the head of a big push-broom to 'scrub' the siding with. Given that the paint is still good, the 'cleaning' doesn't take a lot of effort. |
#22
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#23
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In article ,
"Wood Butcher" wrote: In addition to washing the house: Cleaning and/or stripping the deck. Annual blasting the winter moss from the driveway. Cleaning the mud from the toys - quads, M/Cs, etc Degrassing the underside of the lawnmower. Peeling the bark(and mud, grit, whatnot) off of logs/wood before running them thru the saw/jointer/planer. Etc, etc, etc. You'll be surprised at how many uses you can think of for your new "toy" STOPPIT!! You're making me horny! |
#25
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HEY!
I can still knock paint off a wall! "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message link.net... wrote: I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Even an old man with prostate trouble peeing on the side of the building will be more effective than a 1500 PSI unit. You need at least a 2500 or preferably a 3000 PSI unit IMHO. Lew |
#26
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I wouldn't buy anything less than 3000 psi, 3 gpm. The less powerful models
are good for washing the car, but that's about all. If you decide to buy one, take a good look at the pump. A $400 model gets you a plastic oilless pump. If you want an oil-lubricated metal pump from Cat (US) or Annovi Reverberi (Italy), expect to pay $800-$1000. Gas engines require maintenance. If you aren't going to use the washer very often, renting it might be the way to go, even if you end up spending more in the long run. Let the rental store deal with storage, parts and maintenance. wrote in message ups.com... I'm planning to paint the exetrior of my house to get it ready for sale. The old paint is in decent shape, with not much peeling, so the main function of the pressure washing will be to clean the surface, not strip the old paint. In fact, I'll mainly be repainting the faded trim and only touching up the walls. I was planning to rent a 2,400 psi washer from Home Depot, but am also considering buying a low-end consumer washer for $70-100. For example, there's one on sale at Sears with 1,500 psi (not sure about the GPM rating). Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. |
#27
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... snippage Would something like this be sufficient for my needs, or should I rent the heavy duty one? Thanks. I had several lower pressure units... bought one, "inherited" another,, both at or below 1500 PSI. Really slow way to get little done! *Rant mode: ON* I finally bought what was represented as a 2700 PSI 3 GPM unit (when shopping, remember the GPM is almost as important as PSI). Later during a time when the had the pump in for "warranty repair" the company went out of business :(. I got the pump back and got it repaired a little closer to home and found the pump had a max. 200PSI 3GPM rating. The 6 HP Honda driving the pump would not have been adequate for a larger pump according to Cat. It has a sticker on it stating 2700 PSI, who to believe? ;) *Rant mode: OFF* The point to my ramblings above to make you aware that if buying one, get the model number of the pump and do some research to learn if you are receiving what you are paying for. Now to add my two cents to the loads of other good replies you've had; Pressure will add additional area to the cleaning "zone" and may be controlled with a valve on the machine, or more easily by varying the distance to the working surface. With a low power machine, you have to get close and then be able to clean an area of a few square inches at a time. With mine an a special additional nozzle that throws a "cone" of single stream being spun out of the end for the large concrete slabs and walls (plus the usual jets for fans and streams) . Poorly advertised or not, it will remove a cheap auto paint job, cuts wood and plastic nicely and has an appetite for foot mats made like 3M sanding pads {OWWC}. It will allow for about a 10" to 12 " cone if I move slowly ( I get lotsa spiral patterns if I don't G). How often can you invent uses for it (to justify this with SWMBO)? A lot? Get out the crowbar! Not often? Rent one! Simple. Tom |
#28
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![]() "Thomas Bunetta" wrote in message ... snip I got the pump back and got it repaired a little closer to home and found the pump had a max. 200PSI 3GPM rating. The 6 HP Honda driving the pump snip Should read 2000 PSI T |
#29
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#30
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![]() "J.B. Bobbitt" wrote in message news ![]() HEY! I can still knock paint off a wall! Is your first name John? That's amazing, considering what you've been through. |
#31
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"Buck Turgidson" writes:
"J.B. Bobbitt" wrote in message ^ news ![]() HEY! I can still knock paint off a wall! Is your first name John? That's amazing, considering what you've been through. His middle name oviously isn't "Wayne"... -- Dr. Juergen Hannappel http://lisa2.physik.uni-bonn.de/~hannappe Phone: +49 228 73 2447 FAX ... 7869 Physikalisches Institut der Uni Bonn Nussallee 12, D-53115 Bonn, Germany CERN: Phone: +412276 76461 Fax: ..77930 Bat. 892-R-A13 CH-1211 Geneve 23 |
#32
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On Mon, 27 Jun 2005 22:30:51 -0400, the opaque Robatoy
spake: In article .com, wrote: but the neighbors probably won't appeciate the sight of me on the ladder trying to get at the high spots near the roof ![]() ...why would you need a ladder? He must be short, and not very tall, too. gd&r -- A lot of folks can't understand how we came to have an oil shortage here in America. Well, there's a very simple answer...nobody bothered to check the oil; We just didn't know we were getting low. The reason for that is purely geographical - our OIL is located in Alaska, California, Oklahoma and Texas. Our DIPSTICKS are located in Washington, DC. |
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