I would just continue to use your water. Nice to have good clean water when possibly hitting customers' windows. You shouldn't be paying for your water,..your customers should be. Always best to keep the cost to the customer down,...but you can only do so much when trying to deliver quality.
I always use my own water for my mix unless traveling long distance.But like jeff said try to keep cost to customer down as much as possible .Because most of the time the customers water is running constantley on landscape anyway .Just my 2cents
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Gordon Caldwell Central Ky Roof & Exterior Cleaning 270-849-5283 ckyroofcleaning@windstream.net www.centralkyroofcleaning.net
I agree in doing what ever you can in keeping the customers cost down because the economy still is not good. I have an irrigation well / pumping system I have been using. The water now only cost me a few pennies in filling out tanks.
If you could find someone who has an irrigation well / pumping system & offer to pay them a flat monthly or usage water fee verses using your city water you possibly could be dollars ahead.
We carry 150 gl of fresh water with use, but we do hook up to the customers water and explain to them we how much we may use which most of the time is not much but I choose not to carry more than 150 of fresh water, 150 gl of roof wash at the most.
If I choose to use the customer's water, and I ride over there with just SH in my tank, will the mix be "mixed enough" if I just add water at the site?
Reason I ask is because I read another thread where the "mixing" procedure was being discussed, and the general consensus seemed to be "fill the tank with your mix at home, and the drive to the job site will do the mixing for you." Obviously that won't be the case if we aren't adding the water until the drive is over.
If I choose to use the customer's water, and I ride over there with just SH in my tank, will the mix be "mixed enough" if I just add water at the site?
Reason I ask is because I read another thread where the "mixing" procedure was being discussed, and the general consensus seemed to be "fill the tank with your mix at home, and the drive to the job site will do the mixing for you." Obviously that won't be the case if we aren't adding the water until the drive is over.
That generally applies to powders such as TSP. You can circulate your mix to mix it up. Remember anything over 1000lbs or 119 gallons is over the DOT limit for SH and requires a placard and CDL to carry that much. When it is in solution it then becomes unclassified and can be a problem as well unless it has been tested and classified.
Keep in mind what all that wieght is doing to your vehicle. Making mix at home makes sense for some companies but not all of them. If you don't want to deal with cdl and placards than you could carry the water in a seperate tank from the SH.
DOT states that any amount of 119 gal or 1000 lbs of material. So if you haul a 150 tank for mix and have 50 gal in the 150 tank, it is a violation. In essence if you can haul 150 for water that is fine, but mix in that tank and its a no no
Someone correct me if I am wrong.
-- Edited by Washed-up on Sunday 24th of October 2010 10:34:25 PM
I usually mix the night before with my own water,that way I am ready to go when I get there. If I need more during the day it comes from the owners water supply.
I think Bill said that if it is not mixed and not over 119 gal which would exceed the weight limit(1000 pounds) to drive with chemicals without a card......
Well it is a 55 gl of SH, mixed with water and ammoxy-lo that equals 150 gls of roof mix so it is not pure SH, and at times I do put 55 gl of SH in there and once I get to the first job add water, then soap that takes it to 150 gl which is down to 110 or so after the first roof job. That puts me below the DOT standard, now better explain before drama starts.