T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
31.1 | Rental: $20; Soap: $15-30 | CLOSUS::HOE | | Mon Feb 02 1987 12:57 | 12 |
| Depends on two items, Larry.
1. Is the carpet sufficiently soiled that it'll take a two pass
effort with a do it yourself? Secondly you'll have to move all the
furniture yourself.
2. There is sufficiently enough competition to get a good in house
steam cleaning for 6 to 10 dollar per room. They move your furniture
around for you. The pain in the butt is that you have to be home
to allow the folks to come by to do the work.
/cal hoe
|
31.2 | My .02 | NEDVAX::DPOWELL | | Tue Feb 03 1987 17:15 | 9 |
| I rented one of those machines this past summer. It doesn't do the
greatest job on ground-in dirt, but it sure was a good price.
However.....
I removed the carpeting from one of my rooms last weekend, and lo
and behold.. mildew was growing underneath the carpeting. Presumably
from the summer's cleaning job. The carpeting wasn't the best quality,
but I would have bet a bundle it should have dried out by now.
|
31.3 | Use a cleaning service for best results | MAHLER::DEROSA | I (doghead) heart bumper stickers. | Wed Feb 04 1987 12:28 | 18 |
| Carpet cleaning machines that you rent at the local supermarket heat
the cleaning water via an electric heater. You fill up the input basin
with hot tap water and turn on a couple of switches --- one for the
suction motor and one for a heater. It will heat up the water a little
more (if at all) before spraying it onto your carpet & sucking it back
up.
A carpet cleaning service will typically pull up to your house in a
van. The "cleaner" is the van engine + equipment bolted into the
truck. The van's V-8 engine heats the water, and it gets it A LOT
hotter than the small carpet cleaner that you would rent. Say what you
will about Ford/Chevy vans; they sure are great water heaters. In
addition, they use a larger suction motor as well, since it is bolted
into their truck instead of being dragged along from room to room on
little wheels.
I have tried both ways and getting a "professional" cleaner service
gives a MUCH better result, albeit at a higher price. YGWYPF.
|
31.4 | Nay to Sears | NUWAVE::SUNG | Hoopbusters - de agony of de feet | Wed Feb 04 1987 12:36 | 14 |
| Last time Sears showed up to my house in their van, they took
this huge extension cord and plugged it into my house to heat
their water. The electric meter almost spun off the base when
they turned the thing on. Probably cost me twice as much as
what they charged because of the electric bill.
I wasn't all that impressed by the Sears cleaning job. It seems
as if they never get the detergent 100% out of the carpet and as
a result it started to get gummy and felt horrible to walk on
when it was humid out. I would never do it again.
-al
|
31.5 | Like a pretty spinning top | WFOVX3::BILODEAU | | Wed Feb 04 1987 14:23 | 10 |
| Don't know about Sears' cleaning job but the electric bill
won't kill you. Their heater was more than likely drawing
less than 2 kilowatts for probably less than 1 hour. That
boils down to (no pun intended) less than 2 kilowatt hours.
At our house, that is less than 12 cents.
Don't worry about the spinning meter.
Gerry (my meter is water cooled)
|
31.6 | Go for the big guys | CADSYS::BURDICK | Ed Burdick HLO2-2/G13, dtn 225-5051 | Wed Feb 04 1987 21:45 | 6 |
| Years ago, we had Sears in with the same result as .-2. The ones with the
van and the long hose are the answer. The big machines get the carpet clean
by sheer volume. Until you see one of them work, you can't believe how much
junk is in that carpet.
|
31.7 | not an answer, just a story | ARNOLD::WIEGMANN | | Wed Feb 11 1987 10:26 | 10 |
| When we moved into our house, it had 10 year old gold shag, with
a corresponding accumulation of kid (4 of 'em) stuff and dog stuff.
We hired a guy to come in and clean the carpet before we moved the
furniture in. This is a four level split. He did all the bedrooms
living room, dining room, called me at work, said he was grossed
out, was leaving, we owed him nothing! As we were having the wedding
at the house the following month (no time to replace carpet at that
point) we asked him to finish it & paid him anyway! Two months
later, we got 3 floors of beautiful new carpet. And another sore
back from moving all our stuff all over again!
|
31.8 | THIS IS NOT AN AD!!!!! | KANE::BALDYGA | | Mon Jun 08 1987 16:46 | 23 |
|
I have approx 10+ yrs. experience cleaning carpets (both commercial
and residential, and presently own a "truck-mounted' (van) carpet
cleaning system. A reputable cleaner can clean all the carpets
in an average home (6-8 rooms, hall and stairs) in approx 2 hours
max. This should include moving and replacing furniture, treating
traffic lanes, and spot stain removal. As with anything else, some
cost more than others.......the key is to get a reputable
person.....ask around!!!
The thing about Sears is that those operators are NOT Sears employees,
but independent subcontractors.
In most cases, it is far better to hire a pro. to clean the rugs
in your home, and when you figure the time spent getting a rental
machine, figuring out how to use it, doing the job, bringing it
back..............its far more economical do hire it out. Also,
the rental machines hardly ever work correctly, and any reputable
cleaner will redo a rug if the customer isn't satisfied.
ed.
|
31.9 | Stanley Steemer | TASMAN::EKOKERNAK | | Thu Jun 11 1987 14:07 | 10 |
| I bought a 7 year old split entry ranch with totally abused carpets.
I had Stanley Steemer come in on a 5 area special $89.95, last
Saturday. It took them a hour, moving furniture and all. No Kidding!
Even if the supermarket machines did as well, I would not have done
it that fast myself! I remember it took me all weekend to do my
2 room apartment! They also have evening and weekend schedules.
Phone is 617-792-3988.
Elaine
|
31.10 | Anything Other Than Steam? | IAMOK::DELUCO | A little moderation never hurt anyone | Wed Sep 21 1988 09:32 | 4 |
| I'm interested in knowing about any experience with other than steam
extraction cleaning. There are some companies that advertise a
process called "Chem-Dry", for instance. Is steam extraction the
best method?
|
31.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Thu Sep 22 1988 00:39 | 12 |
| Re: .10
There is a system that employs small sponge particles soaked in
a solvent. You sprinkle this on the carpet, scrub it in with
a beater-brush device, then vacuum. You can rent these from many
carpet stores under the name "Host", Sears also sells a version
of this.
Note that the "steam" cleaners you rent aren't really steam, but
"hot water extraction".
Steve
|
31.12 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Twice,adv. Once to often. | Thu Sep 22 1988 16:56 | 5 |
| A question yet unanswered: Has anyone bought their own carpet
cleaner and with what success?
Don
|
31.13 | We have a Bissel Rug cleaner....... | MEMV01::ROGUSKA | | Fri Sep 23 1988 08:54 | 18 |
| re:.12
I bought a Bissel rug cleaner, as far as I'm concerned it works
as well as the ones you rent from Taylor rental or at grocery store.
However, I really believe that once you start to clean your carpets
that they get dirty faster and stain more, but if you need to clean
your carpets frequently, ie. small children & light carpets!, then
I think the Bissel is a good deal. It's easy to use, can do an
area rug at night after dinner with out the pain of stopping for
the cleaner, hauling into the house, and then returning it the next
day. I believe that the Bissel can also be used as a vacumn, but
I'm not positive - we already had a shop vac..........
I'm pleased with the Bissel and my family and friends like it too!8^)
Kathy
|
31.14 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Wed Sep 28 1988 12:08 | 8 |
|
About a year ago we had our carpets cleaned by Stanley Steamer.
They did an excellent job. He said that whenever we get our carpets
cleaned to use steam, never shampoo. The reason for this he said
is that the shampoo leaves a residue on the carpet which attracts
dirt more. The steam cleaning dosn't.
Mike
|
31.22 | HELP!!!!_Grape Juice on rug. | KAOO01::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Fri Jan 20 1989 09:09 | 12 |
| I desperately need some help as a result of an event this morning.My
daughter managed to dump an entire glass of grape juice(YES GRAPE
JUICE)on our beige rug.When I had left for work my wife and I had
tried carpet stain remover detergent(all this did is turn the stain
black),vinager and water(which got the black out and brought back
the purple).The last thing we tried before I left was club soda,this
seemed to be working.I was told at work that salt would work.
PLEASE-----any ideas???????
Desperate!!!!!
Les Borda
|
31.23 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Fri Jan 20 1989 09:23 | 6 |
|
Dilute it real good with vinager and water. Then poor salt on it
(a lot of salt, enough to completely cover it). Let it dry, then
vacuum.
Mike
|
31.24 | getting out berry stains | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Fri Jan 20 1989 10:03 | 7 |
|
I haven't tried the vinegar, but I'd be afraid that it might set
the stain. I would first try cold water and Borateem (sp?), and
lots of scrubbing. It works good for berry stains.
-tm
|
31.25 | Don't let it dry too quickly | PRGMUM::FRIDAY | Patience averts the severe decree | Fri Jan 20 1989 10:15 | 9 |
| Don't let it dry before you've gotten the stain as faint
as you can possible get it. Keep wetting, pressing with
something absorbent to soak it up, and repeat with whatever
your cleaning solution is until you don't see any improvement.
Then pile on the corn-starch, let dry, brush out, and vacuum
it up.
I've never tried salt, but I know corn starch just drinks up
fluids like a sponge.
|
31.26 | Try asking a pro | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Jan 20 1989 13:11 | 7 |
| You might want to call a carpet-shampoo outfit and ask them (or even
hire them! They do a *much* better job than you can do yourself with
the samll shampooers you can rent). They managed to get out all sorts
of stains in my house (no matter what color the carpet is, you spill
something on it eventually that is a wildly different color...most of
my carpets are brown/tan/cream which you think would match most common
spills).
|
31.27 | reply to all | KAOO01::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Fri Jan 20 1989 13:53 | 8 |
| Thanks for the help everyone,we did our best and it still does not
come out.My wife called a steam carpet cleaning place that specializes
in stain removal,he said grape juice sets almost immediately and
very difficult to get out.He is coming this afternoon but to clean
the rug but says you will prbably still see the stain.
Thanks again
Les Borda.
|
31.28 | | TYCHO::REITH | Jim Reith - HANNAH::REITH | Fri Jan 20 1989 15:13 | 7 |
| For future reference, disposable diapers will absorb a tremendous amount of
spilled liquid and hold it (away from baby). In houses that have them, they are
usually handy and can be opened and placed "baby side" down and pressed in with
a foot. This also helps when Puppy has an accident (although pressing Puppy into
the spot can be more satisfying).
I can attest to Grape juice staining quickly and not coming out :^(
|
31.29 | Too late this time! | WECARE::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Fri Jan 20 1989 16:37 | 18 |
| Also for future reference, stain proof any carpets where kids (or
even adults!) might take grape juice!!!
Grape juice (and lot of other things) are natural dyes -- you get
a chemical reaction and that's it. Some fibers are more and some
less liable to stain. Stain resistance is merely that -- resistance.
Keeping a stain wet with COLD water, sopping it up as fast as possible,
and calling in professionals immediately can take care of some things.
(And some things aren't dyes -- just stains that enzymes or
neutralizers or soap or other remedies can solve.) Things that
SET stains are drying, HOT water, salt! (at least sometimes), mordants
(like metallic salts, aluminum, iron, etc.), and chemicals that
react with the dying agent (which changes from dye to dye.)
You can probably figure out what things are more or less hopeless!
And there are exceptions to every "tip" listed above.
Sherry
|
31.30 | Want some tablecloths that match your carpet? ;-) | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Mon Jan 23 1989 10:07 | 10 |
| Having endured some mishaps with grape juice that was some years old,
I'd be inclined to give any children I might eventually have the
"white" grape juice (Niagra grapes, or is it Delaware?) instead of
that from the purple Concord grape.
Sherry, is tannic acid (and related compounds) a mordant? You usually
get various tannins from the grape skins, along with the dark colors
(or maybe the tannins HAVE the dark colors).
Dick
|
31.31 | Final Result | KAOA11::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Mon Jan 23 1989 12:45 | 30 |
| Well,here's the final result(after the carpet cleaners)a lovely
black stain left in the carpet.The cleaning took out quite a bit,but
the remaining black stain is forever and ever amen!!!I talked to
my insurance company and the adjuster is to call me back.By the
way wit nothing to loose I wonder if a mild mixture of laundry bleach
and water would take out the black and not the carpet color.I recall
a couple of years ago opening(here we go again)a can of GD grape
juice and it sprayed up to the white cealing,I touched the spots
with bleach and they disappeared.
And now a little levity for all you people with spouses and kids.
This is the 3rd house destructo occasion in 6 months.Picture it,on
a DEC relocation,my new house(11 months old)is sold,babysitter with
kids,mom working dad at new location,sonny boy plays with chemistry
set(being told 8 kazillion times NOT ON THE CARPETS)dumps a test
tube full of METHYL ORANGE DYE on his bedroom carpet and tells us
two days latter($200 deductable and a new carpet for a house that
is no longer yours).
Move into new location(house is 5 years old)wife is makinf french
fries,removes a hot pyrex dish from oven,puts it on the burner and
she must have forgot the burner was on,KABOOM,the dish explodes,paper
towel catches fire,hot pyrex melting into the linoleum,thank goodness
no one injured,however($200 deductble and a new kitchen floor,different
insurance co.)Now(if you can imagine)I had to call the insurance
company again!!!!Wonder if I'll get a letter advising me to take
my business elsewhere due to being a high risk???
What a year!!
Les Borda.
|
31.32 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Mon Jan 23 1989 12:52 | 6 |
|
There such things as "Carpet Dyers" which can come in and dye the
carpet spot back to its origional color (or at least very close).
Mike
|
31.33 | HOME_WAR_STORIES | JULIET::MILLER_PA | 49ers, SUPERBOWL CHAMPS | Mon Jan 23 1989 15:28 | 9 |
| re.9
You ought to enter that in TAMARA::WAR_STORIES. It might add a
little "home-style" to the computer war stories...
Good luck with your Carpet/insurance.
Patrick (Yea, 49ers!!!!)
|
31.34 | Replace the spot! | LEDDEV::HASTINGS | | Mon Jan 23 1989 17:34 | 7 |
|
Why not just admit defeat and call in a carpet company to cut out
the bad spot and sew in a new piece of rug? May cost a bit, but
the results could be "good as new".
Mark
|
31.35 | Try LOTS of Baking Soda | WEDOIT::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,261-3450,NIO/N4 | Tue Jan 24 1989 12:53 | 5 |
| I know this is probably too late now. But, for future reference,
I always pour LOTS of baking soda on rugs stains. It 'sponges up'
the stain overnight! I've used this method with wine spills several
times and never had any stain left when I scrape and vacuum up the
dried mess!
|
31.36 | Tannic Acid | CIVIC::WEBER | | Wed Feb 01 1989 14:56 | 13 |
| re: 8
Dick,
Tannic acid is actually a dye, not a mordant. Tannic acid can be
found in tree bark and some nuts. When combined with various mordants
you will get various shades of the yellow grouping
(brown-yellow-orange). Mordants are chemicals which help set a dye
vs creating a color. Some mordants (such as copper sulfate and a
phosphate compound) will influence the shade of color.
nancy
that you can ge
|
31.37 | Getting wax out of rug. | TEACH::BOB | MS-DOS....Just say NO! | Mon Apr 10 1989 14:04 | 9 |
| Does anyone out there in noteland have a safe (reasonably) effective
method for removing candle wax from a rug??? Any effective solvents
or is it something more mundane?
Any suggestions would be appreciated. ("Replace the rug." is not
a valid response... :-) )
Bob
|
31.38 | Hot iron and paper towels | HAMSTR::LADEW | | Mon Apr 10 1989 14:11 | 4 |
| Use paper towels and a hot steam iron. Place towel over wax and
then iron. The wax melts and the paper towels absorb the wax.
Steve
|
31.39 | Mineral spirits | SEESAW::PILANT | L. Mark Pilant | Mon Apr 10 1989 15:53 | 5 |
| Mineral spirits/paint thinner will remove most types of wax. You
probably want to test it on a hidden piece of the carpet to make
sure it doesn't hurt the carpet.
- Mark
|
31.40 | Steve is Right | TINSEL::PHANEUF | TP Business Info Tech (Matt 11:12) | Mon Apr 10 1989 17:54 | 13 |
| Steve is absolutely right in 3152.1.
It works (almost) every time. Just make sure of three things - don't set the
iron TOO hot (let's not burn the carpet, shall we?), use ink/dye-free paper
(cheap brown hand wipes - yes /// newspaper or colored paper towels - no; heat
transfer is an amazing and irremovable thing!), and (finally) change the piece
of paper that is under the iron frequently (the idea is to sop the wax up, NOT
transfer it from on place on the carpet to another). Tremendous run-on sentence,
no?
Good luck,
Brian
|
31.15 | Carpet Master Suit | IAMOK::DELUCO | A little moderation never hurt anyone | Thu Jun 08 1989 13:44 | 24 |
| <<< LYCEUM::DISK$USER:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CONSUMER.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Consumer info exchange -- for Digital employees >-
================================================================================
Note 1511.0 Carpet Master Suit No replies
IAMOK::DELUCO "A little moderation never hurt anyon" 17 lines 8-JUN-1989 12:34
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
An FYI, as a word of caution .......
My wife just submitted paperwork to file suit in small claims court
against Carpet Master carpet cleaning service. They sold her three
shares of common stock about a year ago as part of a contract which
stated they would clean all our carpets twice a year for two years
at no charge, and would clean them for a discounted price (I think
it was half price) after that.
Dealing with them since the contract has been a major problem. Messages
left on their recorder not answered, no-show for appointments to clean
the carpet, poor cleaning.
Before the contract we were very pleased with their service and
never had problems. It appears that the drop in service level is
directly related to the fact that they already have our money.
|
31.16 | Removal of Lead stain | KAYAK::GROSSO | | Tue Jun 20 1989 13:47 | 6 |
| I think this is hopeless but thought I'd ask here as well as call a few
carpet people. I have a lead stain on a carpet. A lead brick was used as a
door stop and was rubbed across the carpet over a period of two years
leaving a black stain on a brown carpet. I figured this would be as
hopeless as getting a rust stain out of something. Can any chemists out
there offer advice?
|
31.41 | Oriental rug cleaning | AKOV11::FRECH | | Wed Sep 27 1989 18:31 | 8 |
| I live in Hudson, MA and would like to get my oriental rugs cleaned.
Does anyone know of a reputable store that will clean oriental carpets?
What can I expect to pay to have an 8x12 rug cleaned?
In talking to stores are there specific questions to ask and things to
be cautious of?
|
31.42 | Try MOMAX1::ANTIQUE_COLLECTIBLE | OASS::B_RAMSEY | 4 wheeling... | Wed Sep 27 1989 21:40 | 5 |
| Look in MOMAX1::ANTIQUE_COLLECTIBLE. There is a note there regarding
the care and maintenance (as well as the values) of oriental carpets.
Try using keyword carpets-rugs in that conference to find the notes.
Hit keypad 7 to add to your notebook.
|
31.43 | Oriental Treasures, Sudbury | HPSCAD::BAUST | | Mon Oct 02 1989 13:49 | 6 |
| Oriental Treasures in Sudbury. I had a rug
cleaned and repaired by them, but do not
remember the cost. Give them a call.
Sue
|
31.53 | Professional Carpet cleaners ?? | SALEM::HOULE | | Tue Oct 03 1989 09:25 | 11 |
|
Mr Moderator, I did a dir/title for carpets and the cleaning of
same and found no notes. I am starting one. If you should know
of one already listed, please move my note.
I am in the Manchester area and would like to have my carpets cleaned
professionally. Has anyone had any good/bad experiences with carpet
cleaning businesses in the area ?? All replies are appreciated.
Don
|
31.44 | Bon Ton Rug Cleaners | CIMNET::GLEBA | | Tue Oct 03 1989 09:45 | 26 |
| Bon Ton Rug Cleaners
Coolidge Hill Road
Watertown, MA
(617) 924-6103
This is a family-run business (the grandfather started the business and
the father and son run it now). The Dohanian family primarily deals in
cleaning orientals.
They cleaned ours and re-cleaned it when they found a remaining spot on
the carpet that was not satisfactory to them. They did an excellent
job.
To let you know, I am biased. The Dohanians are personal friends.
So I know about their integrity and also their involvement in the
Rug Cleaners Association (nationally).
Give them a call for their rates...much depends on size and if you need
any repair work done to your carpet.
Regards,
|
31.45 | | CLOSET::T_PARMENTER | PuritanConeyIslandChiliParlor | Tue Oct 03 1989 09:48 | 4 |
| Brookline Oriental Rugs in Needham, Mass. Just about a mile off 128 at
Needham street. Turn right at the fire station, about 4-5 blocks along
on the left. Shop is in the back. Huge place, devoted to cleaning and
repairing orientals.
|
31.54 | Try LYCEUM::CONSUMER | RAVEN1::RICE_J | This space for rent cheap! | Tue Oct 03 1989 09:54 | 4 |
| Look in the LYCEUM::CONSUMER conference. Note 1111.8 will give
you a directory of carpet and carpet cleaning services.
Jim
|
31.55 | 755 | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Tue Oct 03 1989 10:37 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
DCL [Moderator]
|
31.46 | Send for Brookline Oriental Rug | CIM30::TYRA | | Sat Oct 07 1989 13:56 | 4 |
| A second for Brookline Oriental Rugs. We've had a few rugs cleaned
by them with outstanding results.
KPT
|
31.47 | BE CAREFUL! | SPGOPS::HARBOLD | | Wed Oct 11 1989 12:41 | 18 |
| In evaluating the suggestions it is important to understand the process
to be used. I cleaned a couple of very dirty rugs myself on advice of
a friendly expert and was surprised. I vacuumed all the dirt I could,
then thoroughly wet them with a hose and rinsed the worst dirt out and
then a very small amount of detergent (I mean minimal) and scrubbed
gently by hand or with very gentle light machine brushes. The final
was to thorougly rinse by running the hose over the rugs on both sides
and gently forcing the water through the rug. It worked and the rugs
came out beautifully. An 8x12 is very large for this. The cleaning
is not the problem, but the drying.
There is a complete guide to oriental rugs by a man name Jacobsen
which provides some sound information on the process and what to avoid.
My rememberance is that chemical cleaning/dry cleaning is not
recommended and the mechnical squeezing is bad along with strong
dryers. I recommend getting the book and then check out any
cleaner and ask the exact steps they will use on your rug.
|
31.48 | Nick's Rug | VIA::SUNG | A waste is a terrible thing to mind | Mon Oct 30 1989 10:00 | 5 |
| My neighbor owns Nick's Rugs on RT9 Westbound in Framingham,
just east of Temple Street. He's been cleaning oriental carpets
for many years.
-al
|
31.56 | carpet cleaning system recommendation | CTD026::HOE | Sammy, time out! | Tue Mar 06 1990 11:05 | 32 |
| Moderator, I have checked the directory under Carpet and
Clean(ing), but did not find a note discussing carpet/uphostery
cleaning systems. Please move this note if I overlooked some
other place for this note. This note is cross posted in Gadgets
and Appliances notes.
I am seeking advise and experiences with carpet shampoo(er)/cleaner
systems. There are three options that I am considering.
1 The cheapest is the conversion to our Wet/Dry Vacuum that has
wand and long hose gadget for soap, costing about $49 at
Best Products.
2 A Bissell system that has a container for the soap, a tank for
the residue and a long hose that attaches to the kitchen
fawcet.
3 The third is the self contained system that has a tank holding
the full mixture of cleaning solution and a water heater to
keep the solution warm. This is the most expensive, I believe
it to be about $190 range. My supervisor has one of these and
he tells me that the tank sometimes tips over because the
waste water is in a 5 gal upper tank and the castors are too
close to the base of the tank.
We have an Oreck shampooer that has a tank and two motor driven
brushes that applies a solution to the rug being cleaned. This is
a problem since we need to clan the rug often and if we need to
wait for the rug to dry, it's hard to find another place for
our son, Sammy to play while the rug is drying.
Cal Hoe
|
31.57 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 06 1990 11:08 | 10 |
| There is another option, which is the "Host" system. This is sold at Sears,
maybe other places. It uses tiny sponge bits that are soaked with a solvent.
You sprinkle the stuff on your carpet, run over it with the machine which
is basically a rotating brush to beat the sponges into the fibers, then
vacuum. The claim is that the solvent releases the dirt which is picked up
by the sponges. The carpet is dry almost immediately afterward.
I have not used this system, but it looks intriguing.
Steve
|
31.58 | try this.... | CTOAVX::BALDYGA | | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:54 | 59 |
|
FWIW
I owned and operated a commercial/residential carpet cleaning business
for several years. from experience, i think that you can't beat having
a truck-mounted steam-cleaning done to your home once or twice a year
if necessary. let me explain:
First: No matter which system you buy, you can't get the power,
temperature, and efficency of a professional system. You wind up
spending $$ for a lesser quality machine.
Second: You have to do the work.
Third: The results won't be as good.
CAUTION: As with all businesses, some are good, and some are bad. The
thing about carpet cleaning is that its not rocket science. Anyone can
get into the business with a little money and time. You need to find a
reputable person with good references.
Each spring, *LOTS* of cleaning companies run specials.....Check out
your local paper, etc. ask around. these guys are usually hungry,
because its a tough business to run during the winter. most don't do
rugs all year long. (I personally put my machine in storage DEC 1st
and started up again APR 1st.)
You could save alot of aggrevation by spending a little $ having a pro
come in. ADVANTAGE: YOU DON'T HAVE TO DO THE WORK....
Example: A typical 3 bedroom, 6-7 room house should run you about
$125.00 for the entire job......
TIP: Some operators will discount the work if *YOU* move the
furniture. It's much quicker for them if they don't have to. If you
can move all (or most) of the Livingroom, diningroom, tv room furniture
out of the way, say packed into the kitchen, you might save 3-5 $$ per
room. also, in the bedrooms, just pick up what you can, and push the
rest to the walls. have just the traffic lanes cleaned. Save $$.
If you have the rugs cleaned on a regular basis, say once a year or so,
this will work well. Rugs get dirty from walking on them, very rarely
is the rug under a bed or sofa dirty. (A good vaccuuming is all that's
needed.)
The thing to remember is that once the operator has the truck "set-up"
at your home, and comes walking in with the wand in hand, half his work
is done. If he doesn't have to mess around moving much furniture, you
can save $$$.....
Find a reputable person to do it for you with the right equipment....you'll
be much better off!
regards,
ed.
off......
|
31.17 | Source for Chemical Dry Cleaner | DELNI::EDWARDS | | Thu Mar 22 1990 10:02 | 10 |
| Re.10 and .11
I have been talking in the Consumer notes about getting a Dhurrie
cleaned. The dry cleaning method mentioned here seems to be the best
bet but I'm having trouble locating either a do it yourself method or a
contractor. I would rather have a go myself - can anyone point me to a
rental company who does these chemical cleaning systems ?
Thanks
Rod
|
31.18 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 22 1990 10:48 | 4 |
| You did get a pointer in CONSUMER. I have seen the Host "dry" system
offered for rent at carpet stores and hardware stores.
Steve
|
31.59 | Some Disadvantages | IAMOK::DELUCO | Place clever phrase here | Thu Apr 19 1990 13:35 | 10 |
| The disadvantage I've experienced in using carpet cleaning services is
the inconsistency of the job quality...I couldn't find one that would
do as good a job as I would do....every time. I have two teenagers and
we all eat in the living room regularly in front of the TV. I can't
wait for a carpet cleaning service to come in order to get some of the
stains up quickly enough. Also, everyone I've used has left some
stains uncleaned. Unless you're right there looking over their
shoulder or you are willing to go through the aggravation of calling
them up and getting them back in, it's usually easier to just do it
yourself.
|
31.60 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Wed Jul 18 1990 13:57 | 15 |
| Other advantages of do-it-yourself is that you can do it one room
at a time so the whole house isn't disrupted. Some carpets need
cleaning more frequently than others, they can be done more often.
Spills can be cleaned up much more quickly and easily before the
dirt becomes attracted to the spot where the spill was.
We bought a Sears cleaner (made for Sears Canada) and it is really
handy ... Stability is no real problem unless you are heavy handed
with it. It works well, and isn't too hard to use. It takes maybe
1/2 hour to clean one room by the time you move furniture and go over
with a fresh water rinse. (We use a fresh water rinse to help remove
cleaning fluid residues which seem to attract dirt) The room is ready
to use in normally just over an hour.
Stuart
|
31.61 | VAX system being sold in Canada? | CLOSUS::HOE | Daddy, let's go camping! | Thu Jul 19 1990 13:02 | 10 |
| Stuart,
Is Sears Canada selling VAXes yet? It's a combination
canister/wet/carpet and floor cleaning system. (Sells for $299
here in CXO).
It's totally self contained so that the soap-solution is in a top
container and the waste water is drawn into a bottom tank.
calvin
|
31.62 | Happy VAXing! | BCSE::WEIER | | Thu Jul 19 1990 15:58 | 19 |
| VAXen beware! We bought a VAX and the first time I washed the rugs, I
was horrified (to say the least!). Over the years, I've been renting
the steam cleaners from the local supermarkets. Well, apparantly the
VAX seems to generate more suction than does the rent-a-cleaner.
Therefore, when I started cleaning my rugs, all the dirt of the past 5
years that was ground into the carpet/pad, was pulled to the surface.
To top that, the shampoo that is 'made for' the Vax, isn't a very good
shampoo, so my rugs actually ended up DIRTIER than when I started.
Lucky for me, I happened to have some shampoo left from a previous
steam cleaner-rental, and that took care of everything.
Another point, the VAX shampoo left a terrible dirt-attracting residue
on the carpet. But, with the VAX, and the shampoo I've always used,
the carpets are tan again - and clean through!!! It's a bit more work than
the rentals, and the water is a gravity-feed instead of a pump-feed,
but I'm happy ... plus I don't have to lug the other things around, and
can do it at my own convenience.
Patty
|
31.63 | Heard of 'em in the UK but not in Canada | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Thu Jul 19 1990 18:55 | 30 |
| No, no VAX in sight at Sears here ... The cleaner sold here is totally
self contained made apparently by Singer.
It's built sort of like this :-
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
X XHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHose
X X wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwater feed
X X w
X By-pass X w
IIIIII X Vac X IIIIII
I I X X I I
I I X X I I
I I X X I I
I I XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX I I
I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I
I Water reservoir c/w 2 spd pump I
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
It's effectively 2 concentric tubs. The reservoir holds 2 gals.
You can detach the water hose and lift out the vac tub and use it
as a shop vac by inserting a filter bag over the motor ... and
it works well. The two speed water pump lets you do upholstery too.
Finding the right cleaning fluid is more of a problem ... I'm not
too impressed with Sears own, although it does the job .. just have
to rinse with clear water.
Stuart
|
31.64 | Shop Vac Attachments | CVG::RENNICK | JACK | Mon Mar 11 1991 09:52 | 8 |
| Has anyone bought SHOP VAC carpet cleaner. There are two types
one you connect to the sink the other has a water jug.
They both use your Shop Vac for power.
Do they work? Good, Bad, Poor. Is the one that has to be hooked
up to the sink any better?
Kmart sell them for $30 to $50.
Thanks
Jack
|
31.65 | | FROST::WALZ | Gary Walz | Tue Mar 12 1991 11:07 | 12 |
|
We were given one a while back, and I've used it once. It seems
to do a half-way decent job, as good a a rental Rinse-N-Vac
does.
Set-up and cleaning up afterwards is more of a pain, because of
having to clean out the hose that attaches to your faucet and
all that.
It also came with an uphostlery attachment, which was handy.
-gary
|
31.66 | Steam or Chemical | LAGUNA::HARTZELL | reality and truth | Wed Apr 17 1991 19:46 | 9 |
| I'm planning to have my apartment cleaned by pro's, and need to decide
between steam cleaning and chemical cleaning. In note 755 (I think) I
read of someone who steam cleaned, then removed the carpet and found
mildew growing underneath. A friend is in the carpet business and says
don't use steam, it's not good for the carpet, and go for the chemical.
Any comments or suggestions?
Sherilyn
|
31.87 | Cleaning a Berber carpet | DTIF::FRIDAY | CDA: The Holodeck of the future | Tue Mar 31 1992 10:51 | 11 |
| Does anyone have experience cleaning a Berber carpet, or,
preferably know of a place that cleans them?
We have a 9x12 crean-colored Berber carpet that is in desperate
need of a good cleaning.
Would a business that cleans oriental carpets be suitable?
I looked through note 3510, which contains recommendations
for rug cleaners, but found nothing regarding Berber carpets.
|
31.88 | Very good -- they always tell me I'm not taking good care of mine because I live on them | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Signifyin' Funky | Tue Mar 31 1992 13:32 | 4 |
| In the Greater Maynard area, there's really only one choice, Brookline
Oriental Rug in Needham, Mass.
Elsewhere, I'd ask an Oriental rug dealer where to take it.
|
31.89 | Nick's Rug in Framingham | VIA::SUNG | Live Free or Live in MA | Tue Mar 31 1992 18:38 | 4 |
| Nick's Rug on RT 9 in Framingham cleans rugs for alot of the oriental
rug dealers in the area. The owner's name is Jeff Gusha.
-al<
|
31.49 | removing odor from rug | CPDW::LALIBERTE | CIS Systems Engineering | Thu Aug 20 1992 09:20 | 7 |
| we need to get a curdled milk smell of out an oriental rug. my son
spilt some milk and the original club soda treatment did not get it all.
any advice, pls ? the smell is getting worse.
thanks.
|
31.50 | | MANTHN::EDD | Nimis capsicum | Thu Aug 20 1992 09:43 | 4 |
| Sprinkle baking soda liberally over the area. Let it sit a few
days. Vaccuum. Repeat if necessary....
Edd
|
31.90 | Steam Cleaning Carpet techniques... | IKE22::EIKENBERRY | John (Ike) Eikenberry | Mon Nov 23 1992 11:11 | 12 |
| Hi There -
My wife and I have decided to steam clean our carpets, reanting a machine
from Taylor. We decided that this is an acceptable concession against buying
new carpet right now.
I wanted to see what people have to say about how to do the steam cleaning.
What should I do and not do? Any tricks that help out? Any pitfalls to watch
out for? Any thoughts on how to do the cleaning would be appreaciated.
Thanks,
Ike
|
31.91 | | SNKERZ::SOTTILE | Get on Your Bikes and Ride | Mon Nov 23 1992 11:21 | 12 |
|
I had good results spot cleaning our carpets with industrial hand
cleaner, after my kids smeared my wife's makeup all over our bedroom
carpet.
It got out the stains which that RESOLVE stuff would not.
Just smear it on the dry stain, and work it in good. Let it sit for
2 or 3 min, then soak with warm water. Then vac it up with a wet/dry
vac.
Worked great!
|
31.92 | | IMPROV::IMPROV::KANDAPPAN | | Mon Nov 23 1992 20:27 | 12 |
| Just a word of caution....might be making a mountain out of a molehill...
Carpet cleaning chemicals have been suspected of having some impact
in very young children being afflicted by a rare but deadly disease
known as Kawasaki disease.
So if you are using 'industrial grade' or other toxic chemical
substances to clean your carpets it might be worthwhile to keep
children off the place and allow for good ventilation.
just $0.02
-parthi
|
31.93 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 24 1992 14:02 | 16 |
| Re: .0
You can't rent "steam cleaning" equipment. What you're doing is called
"hot water extraction".
Re: .2
None of the reputable researchers in the Kawasaki Disease field believe that
there is any link to carpet cleaning. This suggested link was investigated
and eliminated several years ago. My information comes from Dr. David Fulton
of New England Medical Center, who treated my son for KD in 1987 (the
information is as of 1991.) BTW, Kawasaki is rare but not "deadly" in the
sense that the disease itself is rarely fatal. But untreated it can cause
heart damage which can be a problem later in life.
Steve
|
31.51 | Repair sought | LUNER::KELLYJ | submit to Barney | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:23 | 5 |
| A related rug question: we need to have a rug repaired, since our dog
did some modifications to one corner. Any pointers to an 'oriental
rug repair place'?
Thanks.
|
31.52 | | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Human. All too human. | Wed Apr 07 1993 09:34 | 1 |
| See .4 above. Most places that clean oriental rugs also repair them.
|
31.67 | Carpet Shampooer recommendations?? | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Tue Oct 12 1993 13:50 | 8 |
|
I am looking to buy Carpet/Upolstery Cleaner/Shampooer. Does anyone
have any recomendations? I'm looking in the $150 - $300
price range.
Comments good and bad most welcome.
/doug
|
31.68 | BGCM | IVOS02::NEWELL_JO | Jodi Newell - Irvine, CA. | Tue Oct 12 1993 13:56 | 12 |
| We bought the Big Green Clean Machine by Bissell.
It was originally advertised on late night TV for
$299 + shipping. Now you can pick it up at places
like Pace Discount, K-Mart, Price Club, etc. for
about $229-$249.
I have used ours several times and love it. I've
done carpets, upholstery in my house and car. An
amazing amount of dirt was extracted each time I
used it. It's easy to use. Fairly easy to store.
Jodi-
|
31.69 | We bought a SEARS! Love it. | MPGS::MASSICOTTE | | Tue Oct 12 1993 15:38 | 11 |
|
We've had ours for at least 12 years.
Prior to selling our last home, I took home one of the giant
industrial cleaners we have here at SHR and cleaned the whole
house. All 3/4 shag. After it dried I still didn't like the
looks (we had a couple dogs residing inside) so I broke out the
little sears jobber and you wouldn't believe what it pulled out
after the heavyduty cleaner! Be sure to get the powerhead att-
achment.
Fred
|
31.70 | | MILORD::BISHOP | A way in the desert and streams in the wasteland | Tue Oct 12 1993 23:01 | 4 |
| Hey Doug, when you buy it (whatever model you end up with), can I
borrow it? :-) :-) :-) :-) :-)
- R.
|
31.71 | | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Wed Oct 13 1993 09:41 | 6 |
| You'll have to check out what kind of job it did first.
Tell you what, we'll buy both and bring back the
worst one ;-)
RE: .-2 and .-3 Guess I'll check out Bissel and Sears.
Any model numbers on those????
|
31.72 | what is big and green? | IVOS02::NEWELL_JO | Jodi Newell - Irvine, CA. | Wed Oct 13 1993 15:33 | 18 |
| You can't miss the "BIG GREEN CLEAN MACHINE"!
As far as I know, there's only one and it only goes by it's name,
not a model number.
Viusal hint: It's green and cylindrical in shape.
P.S. stay away from the upright (looks like an electric broom)
type carpet cleaners that Regina. They might do the job a couple
times but after that they become unreliable. A Regina we owned
had to be disassembled each time we wanted to use it so that we
could pinch the plastic soap and water tube apart. After months
in storage, the shutoff valve would pinch the plastic tube together
so hard that it had to be physically separated to get the liquids
to flow through it. This required us to remove several screws and
panels. It was a pain.
Jodi-
|
31.73 | match your needs | DAVE::MITTON | Token rings happen | Wed Oct 13 1993 19:15 | 13 |
| Bissel makes several different levels of wet cleaners.
The "Big Green Clean Machine" is probably top of the line.
It can be a dry vac as well as "steam cleaner".
We bought a "Promax Plus", I think its the next step down.
I seem to remember it retails for about $100 less.
It does carpet, upholstery, and floors. But no dry vac.
We've found this quite useful and use our existing upright vac
or shop vac for tough jobs.
Dave.
|
31.74 | | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Thu Oct 14 1993 14:49 | 6 |
|
That's good info. I'll go down and look at Sears
and Bissell and try to compare them.
thanks,
/doug
|
31.75 | Chance to try out the SEARS.... | MPGS::MASSICOTTE | | Thu Oct 14 1993 15:14 | 6 |
|
I've got a couple'a rooms that have to be done.
C'MON DOWWWWWWNNNN !!!!! :^)
Fred
|
31.76 | | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Fri Oct 15 1993 16:15 | 2 |
|
Sure thing. Should cover the cost of the machine :-)
|
31.77 | Big Green Machine | AKOCOA::SELIG | | Mon Oct 18 1993 10:34 | 8 |
| FYI
Bissell's Big Green Machine is on sale at Bradlees this week for
$199.95. That's even cheaper than the wholesale clubs. And if you
happen to know some who qualifies for Sr. citizen disciunt you can get
the price down to $180.
JBS
|
31.78 | | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Mon Oct 18 1993 12:13 | 5 |
|
Thanks for the tip. I think Weds is Senior
Citizens day. Least ways that's the only day
my mother-in-law admits to it :-)
|
31.79 | I've got a Big Green One! | ELMAGO::BENBACA | I need a career! Not a PACKAGE! | Fri Oct 22 1993 03:23 | 7 |
| The Bissell Big Green Clean Machine is a Wet Vac, Carpet & Upholstery
cleaner, and can be used as a dry Vac.
The Bissell Promax is a dedicated Carpet cleaner and has a slightly
less powerful motor.
These things really sUcK! :-)
|
31.80 | | ADISSW::FERRIN | | Mon Oct 25 1993 15:29 | 5 |
|
Well I bought the BGCM. Tried it out this weekend.
I'm impressed. Now we'll see how it does over the long haul.
/doug
|
31.81 | BGCM vs. Shop Vac setup | AIRBAG::SWATKO | | Mon Oct 25 1993 16:16 | 6 |
| Question: How does BGCM differ from a Shop Vac equipped with the carpet
cleaning setup? The Shop Vac carpet cleaning setup seems to consist of a
special sprayer/vacuum head and a hose that runs to the sink faucet with an
inline soap dispenser.
-Mike
|
31.82 | | NEWPRT::NEWELL_JO | Jodi Newell - Irvine, CA. | Mon Oct 25 1993 17:01 | 5 |
| The BGCM is self contained. In other words, you fill it with hot
water and run with it. No dragging 50 feet of hose around the
house.
Jodi-
|
31.83 | PROMAX | SWAM2::WANTJE_RA | | Tue Oct 26 1993 17:54 | 9 |
| I brought the PROMAX, since I already had a fairly decent Hoover for
normal cleaning. I could not justify the extra expense, but I lived in
an apartment at the time and did not have a shop area.
The Promax works very well, produces lots of brownish/black water out
of clean soapy water.
Can anybody recommend a good stain remover (grease, tea, all the tough
ones) to use with the Promax?
|
31.84 | Simple Green | IVOS02::NEWELL_JO | Jodi Newell - Irvine, CA. | Tue Oct 26 1993 19:33 | 11 |
| We use nothing but Simple Green for all of our clothes stains,
household chores (and cleaning sneakers) and pre-spotting before
cleaning the carpets.
It can be mixed in several different water to Simple Green
ratios to meet your needs. It's excellent for removing
grease stains. You can find SG at almost any grocery or
hardware store.
Jodi-
|
31.85 | | SSGV02::ANDERSEN | | Wed Oct 27 1993 09:23 | 2 |
|
Resolve for carpets works well for us.
|
31.86 | Test Resolve before applying | AWECIM::MCMAHON | Living in the owe-zone | Wed Oct 27 1993 13:03 | 4 |
| Before you use Resolve, test it out on a piece of carpet that won't
show. We tried it to remove some stains from the medium blue rug in our
van and it took the color out completely! I'm glad we found out before
we tried it on our wall-to-wall!
|
31.19 | hard wood floor underneath | SEABRZ::SEELEY | | Mon Mar 07 1994 12:47 | 15 |
| I have one wall-to-wall carpet in the masterbedroom that needs
cleaning. (we just moved in). It is over a hardwood floor.
Does having hardwood make a difference in whether to go with a rental
or professional cleaning. Does the rental leave more water in the rug?
If I only steam clean it this once, will it completely dry using a
rental?
Can I use "less water" with a rental (don't let it soak as long before
vacuuming it up) that average if I want?
Thanks,
Lauren
|
31.20 | Teflon-topped carpet? | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon May 01 1995 16:41 | 13 |
| My wife called me up today all excited about hiring a carpet cleaning
service to do our entire house. Except for the bit about the Teflon.
Ya see, we bought this high-quality DuPont carpet (I forget the name,
but it was expensive), and the cleaner told my wife we'd have to have
Teflon reapplied to the carpet after the cleaning, or we might as well
forget all the quality we paid for.
It should go without saying that the Teflon re-application would cost
more than the carpet cleaning itself. I think the price was $22/room.
Is this all a bunch of bull?
John
|
31.21 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue May 02 1995 10:23 | 3 |
| It's a bunch of bull.
Steve
|
31.94 | nail polish on carpet | 17512::PHILPOT | | Tue Jul 23 1996 09:44 | 19 |
|
Does anyone have any hints for getting nail polish out of a berber
carpet? The kids decided to paint their nails with a garnet-red
polish, and every time they took the brush out of the bottle, it
dripped on the beige rug. The babysitter used nail polish remover, and
then didn't tell me about it when I got home, so by the time I found
out, the polish and remover had been on the carpet for about 8 hours.
The nail polish remover lightened the stains to a purple color.
We have a Bissel carpet machine that cleans with hot water and
detergent, which I used last night, mostly to get the nail polish
remover out of the carpet. But i still have about a dozen light
purple dots on the rug. Is there any hope of getting this out?
Naturally, it's right in front of the coffee table, in a nice obvious
place.
Thanks for any ideas,
-Lynne
|
31.95 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, SPE MRO | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:11 | 28 |
| http://carpeteria.com/~carpets/care.htm
Find the spot source in the first column and read across that row for
the correct spot removal method to try. Continue using the first method
until there is no longer a transfer of stain to the cleaning cloth. Try
the first method suggested, then the second, and third, etc. until the
spot is successfully removed.
SPOT METHOD
Nail Polish 2,1,3,4,6,7,8
Key to Cleaning Methods
1. Dry Cleaning Fluid - A nonflammable spot removal liquid
available in grocery and hardware stores.
2. Nail Polish Remover - Amyl Acetate - Often has a banana
fragrance.
3. Detergent Solution - Mix 2 cups water and 2 teaspoons mild
liquid detergent (no lanolin, non-bleach).
4. Warm Water - Lukewarm tap water.
5. Vinegar Solution - One cup WHITE vinegar to two cups water.
6. Ammonia Solution - Two tablespoons household ammonia to one cup
water.
7. Spot Removal Kit - Available from retail carpet stores or
professional cleaners.
8. Call a Professional - If you cannot completely remove the spot.
9. Vacuum clean.
|
31.96 | the .NOT. PC answer | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | Character matters. | Wed Jul 24 1996 21:25 | 3 |
| i've had good success with (believe it or not) lighter fluid and an old
toothbrush. you've got to be aware of the fire hazard, though ... and
once the stain is lifted, get the fluid washed out ASAP.
|
31.97 | Little Green Machine # | WMOIS::FLECK_S | Love me, Love my dogs, cats, etc. | Fri Sep 20 1996 10:25 | 7 |
31.98 | Big Green Clean Machine | IAMOK::MCHU | | Thu May 08 1997 13:40 | 6 |
| Any update on Bissell Big Green Clean Machine? The last note mentioned
this machine was in 1993. Are all Big Green Clean Machine owners still
satisfied with the work it does?
I stopped by Ames and found that it was on sale a couple of weeks ago
for $199.99.
|
31.99 | Quick Dry/ or Home Depot | SMURF::RIOPELLE | | Thu May 08 1997 16:01 | 10 |
|
I rent one at Home Depot for $15.00 each year ( sometimes twice )
I'm usally out $20-30 to do the house and also the cars ( with
upholstery cleaner ) But can't beat the pros. The guys I use when it
get's real bad is : Quick Dry 1-800-428-8834. Prices vary. I saw him
clean a food place. As he moved the cleaning wand over the floor you
could see where it had cleaned. We were so impressed we had hime do
our whole house, them my MIL's, my aunts, etc. Excellent work.
Please tell him I sent you. ( Ed Riopelle )
|
31.100 | | BSS::BRUNO | Stand In The Gap | Thu May 08 1997 18:50 | 6 |
|
It's pretty economical for pet owners to buy the machine. Mine
was $130 or so, but I use it pretty frequently. Golden Retrievers
aren't the messiest breed around, but they don't wipe their feet.
Greg
|