washnshine
Well-known member
I think that may be the case on the customer side of things - if they have several friction tunnels as options that are conveniently located and offer money saving monthly wash plans, there may be less of a draw to a friction IBA, and the use of any IBA may be solely to achieve a touchless wash - something different from the ee’s.My question is do you think brushed IBA are becoming a thing of the past as more and more tunnel washes spring up? It seems to me that there is still a niche market for touch free. I see my touch free IBA's growing rev but my brush IBA does worse. Still not sure if it's worth the upgrade/switch?
On the operator side of things, the friction IBA offers them a lower cost to build, lower maintenance, lower employee option that cleans better than a touchfree in a lower volume market.
It all depends on the competition that your wash faces and the volume you are projecting for your location. But with ee’s popping up so quickly and in such large quantities - it is smart to “build for the future.”