Does anyone know the recommended rotational speed of a side brush with filament? We have the top part of the side brush in foam and the bottom in filament. I have found the recommended speed for foam but don't see anything for filament?
Seems you agree????"Dan at Erie Brush confirmed ........liquid lubricates better than foaming soap on the material."
Dan is a good guy but I tend to disagree with him .................. A lot of foam is not a good thing in the lubrication process and in fact can inhibit cleaning by not allowing the brushes to make good contact with the surface.
You are lucky that you have customers that will accept a filament brush - they clean great when set up and used properly. Why not have filament on the top part of the brush too?Does anyone know the recommended rotational speed of a side brush with filament? We have the top part of the side brush in foam and the bottom in filament. I have found the recommended speed for foam but don't see anything for filament?
Same reason as always "Marketing" .You are lucky that you have customers that will accept a filament brush - they clean great when set up and used properly. Why not have filament on the top part of the brush too?
hkim310;101900............... I have noticed that because the brushes spin in the opposite direction of car travel that they do slow down quite a bit once they hit the sides of the car. On the hydraulic power pack the setting for the speed is currently set to 9.5 ( with a max of 10). ..............[/QUOTE said:If brushes slowdown excessively on contact the oil is bypassing. Most likely is the torque control (not the speed control) on the power pack. Adjust this in small increments. A bad hydraulic motor will also by pass internally but this happens less frequently.