Hahaha, not a sponsor! Love your sense of humor. Just purchased a used on myself a few minutes ago. I gotta say though, the price tag brutha!🥶 Hope it's all that they say it is. I also purchased the new Neat Plus version, but by the looks of it this one is better, because it has stronger pressure and can go deeper into the carpets and such. Thanks for the video!
@@restaurantrepairs Other 'dry' solvents are wettable too. But yeah, 'dry steam' means super-heated steam that has high energy with very little water content. Your machine gets into the right temperature range for this, but dunno about the pressure/volume capacity to actually emit 'dry' steam. The first "dry steam clean" I googled for says it's (10L, 170°C/338°F, 8bar/116psi, _1kW_ ) also iirc: the huge steam-cleaning machines for rent that _used to be_ at the grocery-store were originally commercial units with temperature/pressure adjustments to use water alternatives; But the rental company wisely covered up the instructions to strongly encourage people to only use distilled water (sold in store) and detergent . . . I recall that people didn't listen and there was a growing number of machines that were spray-painted white and relabeled 'HCS' (i.e. naphtha(?) _white_ gas(?), a pure hydrocarbon distillate also sold in store) that were sometimes then filled with pump-gas... or diesel... resulting in unfortunate problems for unsuspecting users. Wikipedia's list of dry cleaning solvents includes hydrocarbon solvents HCS on a list of very concerning alternatives that have flash points above or below 60°C... With variably prohibitive combinations of toxicity, flammability, explosive-nes, ozone depletion, cost, and/or more... Curiously I -have- had -tetrachloroethylene (PCE)- and propylene glycol ether (vape pen solvent) cleaning sprays, but never thought to try putting them in my little (200W) steam wand. . . still doubt that would get >10 years of cigarette smoke stains out of dark brown (formerly beige) carpet.
Also, how to you clean up all the liquid after steam cleaning? Is just clothes and towels enough, or you have a seperate wet/dry vac as well? Thanks!
Dry clean rag on the equipment squeegee and floor drains or shop vac if needed
Is this the tosca or hill injection? can I safely use tosca on painted walls and/or hardwood floors? Thanks!
Hahaha, not a sponsor! Love your sense of humor. Just purchased a used on myself a few minutes ago. I gotta say though, the price tag brutha!🥶 Hope it's all that they say it is. I also purchased the new Neat Plus version, but by the looks of it this one is better, because it has stronger pressure and can go deeper into the carpets and such. Thanks for the video!
How is it?
It’s awesome. Worth it.
Thank you!!
Yup. I’m buying it…. Thanks for the demonstration
I like I want one 👍👍👍
Whoa. That’s surely effective
does it have dry steam
:-/ wouldn’t that be like asking if it has cold steam? Maybe I’m the ignorant one here but by definition steam is wet. Right? 😎
@@restaurantrepairs Other 'dry' solvents are wettable too. But yeah, 'dry steam' means super-heated steam that has high energy with very little water content. Your machine gets into the right temperature range for this, but dunno about the pressure/volume capacity to actually emit 'dry' steam. The first "dry steam clean" I googled for says it's (10L, 170°C/338°F, 8bar/116psi, _1kW_ )
also iirc: the huge steam-cleaning machines for rent that _used to be_ at the grocery-store were originally commercial units with temperature/pressure adjustments to use water alternatives; But the rental company wisely covered up the instructions to strongly encourage people to only use distilled water (sold in store) and detergent . . . I recall that people didn't listen and there was a growing number of machines that were spray-painted white and relabeled 'HCS' (i.e. naphtha(?) _white_ gas(?), a pure hydrocarbon distillate also sold in store) that were sometimes then filled with pump-gas... or diesel... resulting in unfortunate problems for unsuspecting users.
Wikipedia's list of dry cleaning solvents includes hydrocarbon solvents HCS on a list of very concerning alternatives that have flash points above or below 60°C... With variably prohibitive combinations of toxicity, flammability, explosive-nes, ozone depletion, cost, and/or more... Curiously I -have- had -tetrachloroethylene (PCE)- and propylene glycol ether (vape pen solvent) cleaning sprays, but never thought to try putting them in my little (200W) steam wand. . . still doubt that would get >10 years of cigarette smoke stains out of dark brown (formerly beige) carpet.
@@restaurantrepairs I think people mean super-hot steam when they say dry steam... maybe.