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clarkson

  • Posts: 1026
Cladding
« on: July 20, 2017, 08:09:07 am »
hi  guys
We where asked for a day rate for a guy and a pressure washer.

When our guy got to site it was cladding that was dusty as a new build .  We where subbing  so this hadn't been mentioned.

Looked easy , so. Cold water pressure washed it carefully rinsing .  Dust was all running of fine .

When it dried however it dried all dusty and smeary again , so rinsed again .  Smeary again.

We had 500 litres of wfp water with us so rinsed the whole thing again , smeary again.

Time was up , main contractor not happy with results , our parent contractor  worried his client isn't happy.

We on the other hand have done what we where commissioned to do  , above and beyond.

Firstly just venting  not going to go on a site again  on man and machine basis ,  we are. being held responsible to get the cladding clean when the main contractor didn't spec things right.

Secondly anyone got a solution to get first clean dust of efficiently  so I can correct it .

Thought about soft washing it but don't want to waste the time if it's not going to clear the dust .

Maybe TFR?

Any thoughts

Cheers

John

Smudger

  • Posts: 13438
Re: Cladding
« Reply #1 on: July 20, 2017, 09:47:48 am »
Not wanting to appear argumentative, but you stated dust removal - yet you still have dust left ? Correct ? How is that above and beyond ?

Personally I never do day rates and secondly always check out the site and produce a world order to specify exactly what is to be cleaned and what is to be the expected result.

Depending on the cladding type, I have found water fed pole scrubbing to the the absolute best for dust/algae removal with no residue - you can't beat physical contact of the brush.

Pw is great for a lot of things but this type of work you need to get really close to every inch of the cladding otherwise it just leaves dirt behind

Darran
Never argue with an idiot, they will only bring you down to their level, and beat you with experience

clarkson

  • Posts: 1026
Re: Cladding
« Reply #2 on: July 20, 2017, 10:53:38 pm »
Hi  smudger
My point is we where sent to go over the cladding on a day rate for pressure washing .  The site manager made the decision that's what he wanted .

As you say brushing down with wfp is more effective , so his remit was wrong.

If he had said I have some very dusty cladding  He wanted cleaning , it would  have been totally our responsibility to make sure it was clean  , but then I , as you say would have inspected it and worked on price to get a good result.

I was asked to rinse it once ,  he thought it would work .  it hasn't  but we have done what we said we would do actually 3 times. And wfp once  so that's four times what was agreed.

I won't do day rates again myself .  The problem is  they don't know  what they actually need.

Will try wfp it again a few times. See if it comes up better
John

Splash & dash

  • Posts: 4364
Re: Cladding
« Reply #3 on: July 21, 2017, 09:07:28 am »
Personally I always go and look at the job as the customer isn't always the best person to decide how a certain surface is cleaned , I would have looked at it and given them options Evan tyred a patch with the pole to see what it looked like , this type of situation is a problem when sub contracting you have done as you were asked but it's not a suitable method for the job , unfortunately you are left with an unhappy customer and out of pocket trying to sort it out 😬😬😬😬

Matt.

  • Posts: 1832
Re: Cladding
« Reply #4 on: July 21, 2017, 09:28:12 pm »
I have a job, there's loads of building work going on. Guys asks me to clean some rollers shutters covered in building dust.... Now shutters are a doddle to clean wfp so thinks ye ok will take about hour or so.
These shutters have millions of little holes in them ( must be for letting light in or Sutton ) but didn't think anything of it.
F me ..... I cleaned them good and proper, looked great when wet, but next day I sees them and thinks hmmm they a bit shuddy so does them again, and again and they still dried crap 😤🔫
I got them to acceptable standard but had to have a guy doing insides while I was outsides bringing both sides down together, but was a bugger to do