I soap from the bottom up washing houses. It takes a little more soap and on most homes there wouldnt be a problem with streaking. I have seen a few homes that would streak so I try to stick with a system that I know will help avoid that.
I have talked to guys who have washed A LOT of buildings and soap top down all the time.
While roof cleaning I shoot from the gutter and top down 90% of the time.
My last few cleanings I applied from the bottom up. I seemed to use less mix, have less run off and the cleaning's went faster. I'm still in the learning process of technique but I seem to get better results with spraying from the bottom up.
Well, for one that is my friend Mike Kreisle doing the video. I am far from an expert on washing houses, but I know a little bit about cleaning roofs. My thoughts on it are as follows. Water and Sodium Hypochlorite once mixed are mixed i would think, amd would evaporate pretty closely, since even 12.5 percent PURE Sodium Hypochlorite is 87.5 percent water anyway. Ya know, I have always wanted to TRY this applying cleaning chemicals from the bottom up, but the houses I clean have then god darn bushes in da way Like I said, I aint the best house exterior cleaner, but I wet the house wall down first, then I apply my stuff, watch it work, and I rinse it right away. One day maybe I will figure out how to apply chemical to a soffit from the bottom up maybe I will remove the soffit, stand it up, and spray it from bottom to top ?
Not every situation is going to be the same. Some days its hotter than others, sometimes the sun is out and some days its not. Spraying from the bottom up with full flow means moving much faster to avoid increased run off. Using a smaller tip to control the amount of love and how fast it is applied may help some one that is trying this for the first time.
With a fan that wide and a little surfactant you can apply a house mix and never get a plant wet.
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Matthew C Perry General Manager Callahan Pro Wash Professional Exterior Cleaning Services Roof Cleaning, Pressure Washing, Paver Cleaning and Restoration 813-727-5161 callahanprowash.gmail.com
Excellent video, i myself always house wash from bottom up rinse top down, and as far as a roof I spray from the gutter top to bottom, less run off this way..
Great job with video, loved the hand jesters, Im the same way
Dave
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Elite Roof Cleaners Roof Cleaning Missouri & Kansas City
I do agree with the gentlemen's video, applying from the bottom up with your chemical, that is the reason I do it and how I was trained many years ago, and rinse from the top down. Good video on what he is trying to explain.
Mike is also on the PWNA roof cleaning committee. I was taught by an Envirospec rep to apply and clean this way when using chem and we did see the results of doing it the opposite way. Now that we use a little SH in our soft wash mix, we find it to be less of an issue. Mike has a lot of vids, you can check them out on youtube.
Seems way over thought in my opinion. I'm not gonna debate top to bottom or bottom to top. My method is probably way different than most others here anyhow.
But I will debate the reasoning,...I don't think there is enough time for any significant or measurable amount of water to evaporate and effect the concentration of the cleaner.
I think it could be possible I suppose if it was a very hot day,...but even then,... I believe it would only affect oxidized siding and not dirty siding.
I wash from the top down,...but I also brush wash,..so I'm getting the whole house as clean as it should be and don't have to worry about "clean" streaks,...even if this guys theory is valid.
If you spray top down it's not going to be evenly applied and it will collect and run down. These runs (I'm assuming) are what causes streaking. Not from evaporation but from more cleaning solution in those areas. Just my theory though.