Buzzie8
Member
I tried KR a long time ago and bought a pallet of powder. I am pretty sure they supplied a free mixing tank. Can't remember what the minimum order was to get it though. Worth investigating.
Dultmeier has the specs of the drum mixer motor listed on their website. You'll still have to buy a few things to make the mixer complete. It may be well worth the $250 to buy one, especially since you will save that much after the first two batches of soap you mix.Trying to keep costs down, I really don't want to purchase a $250+ barrel mixer. It looks like something I could rig up with spare parts around the shop. Can someone give me the details on the motor used? I have some spare ones just sitting around that I could put to good use.
I mix together liquid and powdered tire cleaner, and made a mixing blade out of a 3-foot stick of 1/4" threaded rod and a strip of stainless that I bent into a propeller shape. Cost about $4 for the rod, the rest I had. I just chuck it into a drill. I'll try to remember and get a pic of the blade I made.Trying to keep costs down, I really don't want to purchase a $250+ barrel mixer. It looks like something I could rig up with spare parts around the shop. Can someone give me the details on the motor used? I have some spare ones just sitting around that I could put to good use.
Waxman what surfactant to you add and how much? Are you using this in your automatics?I am trying and like:
1. Kleen Rite Super Kleen Powder.
2. Trans Mate Wonder wash TM057.
I add some surfactant in when I mix.
I use the metering tips but like the idea of a flow meter I can adjust.
Cars look great; they look buffed, lots of them. May sound funny but it's true.
Soapy, can you post a picture of how you have your flowmeter set up for you presoak? I am having a hard time visualizing what it looks like.I use a flow meter that all my presoak goes through to a non tipped injector. I titrate the presaok at a given flow on the flow meter so I know how strong it is. If I need a little stronger I just dial up the flow meter a little and I know I am getting stronger presoak. I can also watch the flow meter to make sure the draw stays consistent throughout the barrell. I use powder also.
I TOTALLY AGREE.... "significant savings" and "I save between 50-75%" just isn't enough for me. I'd prefer a precise cost breakdown, maybe even some tax returns, notarized of course. On second thought, I'm going to build a new car wash soon, so if one of you guys could do the pro-formas for me, that would be great... of course if those numbers don't work out, I will hold you personally responsible.Has anyone done an actual unit to unit test between powder and liquid. I would like to see numbers between cost and dilution ratios. I too would like to switch to powder but the ultra concentrated liquids do save on shipping, because i am not paying to ship water. Liquids also have a higher dilution as opposed to powders so do you really save money with powders. I have been washing for 30 yrs and used to use powders in the good ole days because that is mostly what we had. I would think viscosity of liquids between mixed powders and straight out of the bucket in bay presoaks would be different, so they would draw at different rates. Lets see some numbers