OK, color me clueless as to how this would help. Of course I do not know if all systems are like mine.What about putting the flojets out in the bays, weather protected of course.
Where does your line from your flojet T into you HP line? In the equipment room or above the bay with a manifold? If the former, then you need a manifold above your bay so you are as close to the wand as possible with the chemical. If you're going into a manifold above the bay already, I'm not certain any one way will gain efficiency over the other to get the chemical from the manifold down to the wand.My current system has the solenoids and g57 flojet in the pumproom.I want to speed up the delivery time to the bays .Delivery is through the hp wand.Currently using 3/8 od poly tubing as supply lines from a float tank.Ideas on a faster system would be appreciated
That's why I like the air/liquid mixture so well. I run the tire cleaner at 80 PSI and the air 5 PSI above it, with needle valves at both. That lets me adjust the air down to a small flow while getting 85 PSI behind it to speed it to the gun. The needle valve on the liquid lets me regulate it to a very slow flow, so I can run the product three times as strong as recommended and not use a large quantity of product. I only set up the air purge because I already had the programmable relay hooked up to the common air solenoid, so I only had to add a couple things to the program to make it purge. Tire cleaner/presoak/air all tee together at one common check valve, and with the air set just above the liquid pressure there's never any liquid pushing back in the air line. It also keeps the flow consistent; when air pressure is much lower than the liquid, only liquid gets to the gun with the trigger released and when it's pulled the customer gets only liquid until it clears again. Mine stays consistent.Earl Weiss said:I can see how guys pushing 175 PSI would chase all the old solution from the line to the gun quicker than a flo jet pushing 60 PSI. Can't help but wonder if you are also then using double the amount of product. (I guess double because tripling the pressure will not neccessarily triple the volume)
22-30 seconds seems like a long time for someone to wait for a switchover in chemicals. Where is your manifold to push the chemical into the HP line?Jeff, my change over time runs between 22 to 30 seconds. Starts out a dribble then pressurizes to 55 psi.
I appreciate the input and what other members t& e systems are doing.
Thanks to all of you for your input.
MEP, are you saying that all 3 lines (pre soak, tire cleaner, and air) each have their own lines running to each bay from your equipment room into a manifold above each bay with only one check valve before they are connected to the high pressure line? If this is true, how do you prevent the pre soak and or tire cleaner from pushing back into each other depending on which one is being used or is the amount negligible?That's why I like the air/liquid mixture so well. I run the tire cleaner at 80 PSI and the air 5 PSI above it, with needle valves at both. That lets me adjust the air down to a small flow while getting 85 PSI behind it to speed it to the gun. The needle valve on the liquid lets me regulate it to a very slow flow, so I can run the product three times as strong as recommended and not use a large quantity of product. I only set up the air purge because I already had the programmable relay hooked up to the common air solenoid, so I only had to add a couple things to the program to make it purge. Tire cleaner/presoak/air all tee together at one common check valve, and with the air set just above the liquid pressure there's never any liquid pushing back in the air line. It also keeps the flow consistent; when air pressure is much lower than the liquid, only liquid gets to the gun with the trigger released and when it's pulled the customer gets only liquid until it clears again. Mine stays consistent.
Yes, three lines, one check valve. The liquid pumps "dead-head" on the solenoids so there's no way for one liquid to back up into the other. The air pressure is 5 PSI higher than the liquid, which stops any product from entering the air line. It also protects against failure due to a bad check valve because high-pressure will just bleed off through the air regulator and nothing gets damaged.mjc3333 said:MEP, are you saying that all 3 lines (pre soak, tire cleaner, and air) each have their own lines running to each bay from your equipment room into a manifold above each bay with only one check valve before they are connected to the high pressure line? If this is true, how do you prevent the pre soak and or tire cleaner from pushing back into each other depending on which one is being used or is the amount negligible?
It doesn't, but very few people do that. At least with the setup as I have it, there's only about a 12-second changeover.mjc3333 said:Also, you had mentioned in past posts you air purge the line. If a customer is on a high pressure function and then switches to a low pressure function right away, how do you get the switchover to low pressure in such a short time frame (4 sec)?
The high-pressure or spot-free will trigger the blow-down. If someone uses soap then foam brush, the wand will clear while they're using the brush.mjc3333 said:Do you air purge the high pressure hose from the manifold to the gun each time the bay is not being used?
20 feet, including a 1-foot piece of stainless pipe and a "swivel saver" hose, all 3/8" ID.mjc3333 said:How long of a run is it from the low pressure manifold to the tip of the gun?
I used to run Scotch Plaid minty tire cleaner, recommended 64:1, I ran it 24:1. I now mix it with their powdered tire cleaner to remove brake dust better, but the liquid tire is still being applied equivalent to 36:1.mjc3333 said:What brand tire cleaner do you use and at what ratio?