Dope video but after watching a bunch of these, it doesn’t “look like” extraction happened especially after that chemical is put down. The crb machine usually agitates the dirt to get it up easier.
The chemical binds with the dirt and crystalizes when dry. So basically instead of the dirt being trapped in the carpet fibers, it''s trapped in dirt once it's dry. You have to vaccume it after its dry to pick up the left over dirt.
It looks that way because it wasn't extracted. This is a style of carpet cleaning is called "encapsulation cleaning". The magic is in the chem...once the cleaner has been applied and scrubbed in, the cleaning agent bonds to dirt particles and begin to harden or encapsulate. This leaves the soil in a suspended state until the encapped dirt is vacuumed away later
80% of soil on a carpet is insoluble,a vacuum picks up about 79-80%,so he is left with 20-21% of soluble soils,which encap will work on,a post vacuum after drying,will finish off any dry soils left.
@@Dpixtion did you see the encap dry and then get vacuumed up? I didn’t All the dirt that was there after he first vacuumed is still in the carpet when this video is over.
Plus they aren't going to go back over the same work 3 times like they did in the video. They go over it one time. I was already on the phone with Stanley Steamer before he was even finished.
Dope video but after watching a bunch of these, it doesn’t “look like” extraction happened especially after that chemical is put down. The crb machine usually agitates the dirt to get it up easier.
The chemical binds with the dirt and crystalizes when dry. So basically instead of the dirt being trapped in the carpet fibers, it''s trapped in dirt once it's dry. You have to vaccume it after its dry to pick up the left over dirt.
It looks that way because it wasn't extracted. This is a style of carpet cleaning is called "encapsulation cleaning". The magic is in the chem...once the cleaner has been applied and scrubbed in, the cleaning agent bonds to dirt particles and begin to harden or encapsulate. This leaves the soil in a suspended state until the encapped dirt is vacuumed away later
At what point did the dirt leave the carpet?
80% of soil on a carpet is insoluble,a vacuum picks up about 79-80%,so he is left with 20-21% of soluble soils,which encap will work on,a post vacuum after drying,will finish off any dry soils left.
So what your saying is
1.) you didn’t watch or pay attention
2.) your not in the business of cleaning or are aware of the process he did.
Got it.. 😊
@@Dpixtion did you see the encap dry and then get vacuumed up? I didn’t
All the dirt that was there after he first vacuumed is still in the carpet when this video is over.
@@BlockchainToTheFace I dont see what you talking about.. what part is he missing, perhaps I’m totally missing it..
@@Dpixtion all the dirt is still there until the home owner vacuums it out themselves
Plus they aren't going to go back over the same work 3 times like they did in the video. They go over it one time. I was already on the phone with Stanley Steamer before he was even finished.
He might have hit it with the orbitor pad cleaning first to get the dirt
All this does is move dirt around and the scrubbers only spread dirt around and harm carpet fiber.
Learn science before commenting.
@@MrYega-zq7rz Okay MR. Science. If my carpet is dirty and a scrub it with a brush, where did the dirt go.
You are dumb @@geraldsinger7982