Officer
Member
I run Hi/Hi. What chemical are you using. What are your dilution ratios. Thinking of bumping up to red tip. Can't get that damn eyebrow off.I am 2 passes of hi ph. I seemed to get less cleaning power going hi/lo or lo/hi.
I run Hi/Hi. What chemical are you using. What are your dilution ratios. Thinking of bumping up to red tip. Can't get that damn eyebrow off.I am 2 passes of hi ph. I seemed to get less cleaning power going hi/lo or lo/hi.
Hey Waxman,I use hi / hi. Simoniz correct powder, 50lb box with 1.6 gallons simoniz foam additive to make a very good 55 gal. drum of presoak for about $67. Beat that! ( thanks S.G.!)
How are you mixing it? Automatic mixing barrel or another way? Drill with mixer on the end. Sorry I just want to know what I'm getting in to.i use a 50lb box of correct, 50 gal. water and 1/3 of a 5 gallon pail of simoniz foam additive. i think i'm using a red tip in a .086 injector.
it does ok with the eyebrow; not perfect but i've only seen acid do that.
$62.59 per drum is hard to beat! I feel I could apply it with no metering tip and still do well as far as soap cost per car.
I should add that Scott Gray was the one that 'hipped' me to mixing my own powdered soaps. It wasn't something I came up with on my own, but you know how it goes: "a good idea is always worth copying".Waxmans receipe works really well I just mix it with the piece of conduit that my feed hose is in.
LW 4000 with a white tip cleans very good goes on like milk.
On my top wash I do use a acid first pass.
My issue was finding a soap that would get that last bit of film off of white cars.
I've also been expereminting with a local soap company called All Clean by Dynamic Development with pretty good results.
If u haven't tried the powder just do it u can't beat the cost and you'll be surprised that it was that easy and that it really works.
I
Yep, done that a few times from the forum."a good idea is always worth copying".
"a good idea is always worth copying"..... EXACTLY. Waxman, I've seen your posts all over the forum and many people echo your advice. My Correct Powder arrives today (with foam additive). I can't wait to mix my first barrel and put some heavy soap on. Lets face it, customer are intrigued by sight and smell. When they see the amount of soap you put on, it makes them return.I should add that Scott Gray was the one that 'hipped' me to mixing my own powdered soaps. It wasn't something I came up with on my own, but you know how it goes: "a good idea is always worth copying".
Yes, they will. Powders take a little more work and can be harder to keep consistent. Some people say it's no big deal to fool with them, but for me its nice to put on a drum of liquid concentrate and not have to touch it for weeks.Chemical reps try to steer you away from powders, but I'm still trying to find my way, as a rookie.
I think turning out a clean car is implied, but as we know, not all operators are in it to clean cars. My only objective is to clean cars ,first.I would agree with that in a self-service car wash. However, in automatic washes, what makes them return is getting their car clean.
A blue tip is 25:1. When you mix a powder in a drum you're not going to get a very concentrated product. You may have to run it with no tip, which is 4:1.Simoniz Correct is a NO GO! Clean just wasn't there. Looking to try JBS Hyper Storm Polymer Presoak. Updates to come. As of now, Kleen-rite's in bay presoak is working nicely on a blue tip.
I did run the simoniz correct powder without a tip and the results were still undesirable. At present, I'm running the in bay presoak from KR on a blue tip... not the correct powder.A blue tip is 25:1. When you mix a powder in a drum you're not going to get a very concentrated product. You may have to run it with no tip, which is 4:1.