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jimiwindows

  • Posts: 537
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #20 on: September 02, 2013, 10:34:52 am »



  4 tyres for my van £360 and last 2 to 4 years 

ben M

  • Posts: 4720
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #21 on: September 02, 2013, 11:51:18 am »
ive spent over £1800 on 3 poles,aqua-daptors and brushes this year! ;D

are they worth it?in my day to day working life id say yes as working with mega light poles and brushes makes my day very easy.

im hoping to get 3 years out of my main pole(extreme 25) and 5 or 6 years out of extreme 47 and 22 slx poles.time will tell though.

regards


dazmond

Have you Daz?
You never mentioned...
;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

windiewasher

  • Posts: 4393
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #22 on: September 02, 2013, 12:13:31 pm »
ive spent over £1800 on 3 poles,aqua-daptors and brushes this year! ;D

are they worth it?in my day to day working life id say yes as working with mega light poles and brushes makes my day very easy.

im hoping to get 3 years out of my main pole(extreme 25) and 5 or 6 years out of extreme 47 and 22 slx poles.time will tell though.

regards


dazmond

Have you Daz?
You never mentioned...
;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
;D ;D
Did you add your brushes and aqua dapter prices on daz?
Takings off all first cleans till march 7th 2014
October  total=  cleaned  extra per month
November = cleaned extra per month
Total £  so far.

dazmond

  • Posts: 23967
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #23 on: September 02, 2013, 04:57:28 pm »
gary im still going abroad as well  in a couple of weeks.im taking my poles with me!lol. ;D ;D ;D

price higher/work harder!

Dave Willis

Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #24 on: September 02, 2013, 05:44:23 pm »
The question on fishing pole cost does make a good case.
1+

Years back a few of us got involved with fishing pole conversions started by our Tosh. They were light, about 18' long and reasonably rigid. They were a vast improvement over our Unger Teleplus poles. With a Ron Thomson pole at £13.99, a brush at £2.99, you could make a pole for under £25.00.

We needed a light brush and the only decent one around was the Bentley brush which we converted. Some brushes worked well, others didn't.

The downside with the fishing poles was that they were modular. The ones we converted had 6 sections. My van was long enough to store them in sections of 2. For an average house we needed all 6 sections which meant the first walk from the van was to carry the poles to the furthest window. Then we went back to the van to pull the hose out.

Once we had done the tops, we needed to discard sections to do the lower windows, throwing them far enough out of the way so nobody stood on them. When completed, the first trip back to the van was with the remaining sections and the hose and the second was to retrieve the discarded sections. If you got interrupted and forgot them behind, then that meant a wasted trip back to the last house to find them.

In comparison to an old fiber glass telescopic pole they were no match for speed. I worked with a fellow window cleaner off my van for a few days when his van was broken, and the speed setup difference between him and me was embarrassing. I wasted so much time I calculated that would easily pay for SLX's with the increased productivity.

The price of carbon fiber poles has come down over the years despite the costs of raw materials going up. My wife was very upset when I purchased an SLX40. It was a similar cost to a return ticket to Australia plus a bit of spending money. 4 years on, make the same comparison.

In the early days, Facelift were the best poles, but price wise, they were out of reach for us. It was Gardiners that bought carbon fiber technology to the proverbial masses at an affordable price.

Spot on Spruce - I did exactly the same.

However, you forgot to mention driving to the next job, opening the back door and realising you'd left some sections stuffed in the hedge at the last job, or paying £600 for a Maver Superlight then treading on a section or two .. happy days.

Spruce

  • Posts: 8462
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #25 on: September 02, 2013, 08:13:28 pm »
The question on fishing pole cost does make a good case.
1+

Years back a few of us got involved with fishing pole conversions started by our Tosh. They were light, about 18' long and reasonably rigid. They were a vast improvement over our Unger Teleplus poles. With a Ron Thomson pole at £13.99, a brush at £2.99, you could make a pole for under £25.00.

We needed a light brush and the only decent one around was the Bentley brush which we converted. Some brushes worked well, others didn't.

The downside with the fishing poles was that they were modular. The ones we converted had 6 sections. My van was long enough to store them in sections of 2. For an average house we needed all 6 sections which meant the first walk from the van was to carry the poles to the furthest window. Then we went back to the van to pull the hose out.

Once we had done the tops, we needed to discard sections to do the lower windows, throwing them far enough out of the way so nobody stood on them. When completed, the first trip back to the van was with the remaining sections and the hose and the second was to retrieve the discarded sections. If you got interrupted and forgot them behind, then that meant a wasted trip back to the last house to find them.

In comparison to an old fiber glass telescopic pole they were no match for speed. I worked with a fellow window cleaner off my van for a few days when his van was broken, and the speed setup difference between him and me was embarrassing. I wasted so much time I calculated that would easily pay for SLX's with the increased productivity.

The price of carbon fiber poles has come down over the years despite the costs of raw materials going up. My wife was very upset when I purchased an SLX40. It was a similar cost to a return ticket to Australia plus a bit of spending money. 4 years on, make the same comparison.

In the early days, Facelift were the best poles, but price wise, they were out of reach for us. It was Gardiners that bought carbon fiber technology to the proverbial masses at an affordable price.

Spot on Spruce - I did exactly the same.

However, you forgot to mention driving to the next job, opening the back door and realising you'd left some sections stuffed in the hedge at the last job, or paying £600 for a Maver Superlight then treading on a section or two .. happy days.

 ;D ;D ;D

.........they did seem to crush exceptionally easily didn't they? I stood on a section of the first pole on the first day. Good thing we had a couple of spare sections. I also fiber glassed a few as well with a fiberglass wrap. They lasted well TBH.

When they stopped making the Senoflex I bought a couple of Energies which weren't the same and were less rigid. We still have a working Senoflex unit in son's van which he uses on a job he takes his car and backpack to. It looks really tatty now and very unprofessional.

We will include these in the 'good ole days' stories for the grandchildren.  :)
Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail!

The older I get, the better I was ;)

gary999

  • Posts: 8156
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #26 on: September 03, 2013, 08:16:41 am »
gary im still going abroad as well  in a couple of weeks.im taking my poles with me!lol. ;D ;D ;D



im having January off aswell instead of poles :P

Perfect Windows

  • Posts: 4179
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #27 on: September 03, 2013, 04:20:01 pm »
Hi,

I think we pay through the nose for a good working pole, which has to stand the vigours of continuous work , day in day out.

I do understand that tools in any trade need to be replaced, but i feel the poles we use should not wear out as quick as they do... ( spin happens within a week or two with  some main supplier poles)

how long does your pole last before it needs attention?and should we be demanding more for the money we pay ?

If you're asking the question then you probably are paying too much.  Buy cheaper or make your own.  Make good enough ones and you'll be able to sell them at hugely inflated prices.

Vin

8weekly

Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #28 on: September 03, 2013, 04:31:30 pm »
A CLX22 weighs 50 grammes more than an SLX22. Arguably, at that height you are better paying LESS and buying the CLX as everyday?

dazmond

  • Posts: 23967
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #29 on: September 03, 2013, 05:04:06 pm »
each to there own regarding poles.i used to have a clx 22 and its a good budget pole however the extreme requires a lot less effort when cleaning at full reach over connys/extensions and i have a lot of em on my round plus large domestic jobs with 3 storey windows and velux windows so i prefer paying a bit  more for a lighter more rigid pole.

by the way gary why do you take the whole of january off?esp with having roughly 2 weeks off at xmas as well? ???

so do you have 6 weeks off?


best wishes


dazmond
price higher/work harder!

gary999

  • Posts: 8156
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #30 on: September 03, 2013, 05:32:46 pm »
I work all the way up to xmas and between xmas and new year
then take January off its cold miserable,customers are skint and don't
want to see you.

a weeks holiday then I hibernate till feb ;D

dazmond

  • Posts: 23967
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #31 on: September 03, 2013, 08:04:38 pm »
sounds good gary!its giving me food for thought! ;)

im thinking in future of doing the same!but going away abroad for the whole month to a warmer,sunnier place!
price higher/work harder!

gary999

  • Posts: 8156
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #32 on: September 03, 2013, 10:19:33 pm »
sounds good to me...im sure your customers will appreciate
the break from you ;D

if you want a break it makes sense to me to have it
when it will have the least financial impact on you ;)

dd

  • Posts: 2568
Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #33 on: September 04, 2013, 07:08:08 pm »
When u look at other businesses our only real expense apart from van is pure water and a pole so I think prices are ok only pennies a day over the 3 year pole life.
Pumps, batteries , hose, aquadaptor or pole taps, various hose fittings, trying a different brush. All I know is when I order a new pole and get a few connectors etc as well - the extras turn out quite expensive when all added up.

home6442

Re: Are we paying too much for poles?
« Reply #34 on: September 04, 2013, 07:25:59 pm »
When u look at other businesses our only real expense apart from van is pure water and a pole so I think prices are ok only pennies a day over the 3 year pole life.
Pumps, batteries , hose, aquadaptor or pole taps, various hose fittings, trying a different brush. All I know is when I order a new pole and get a few connectors etc as well - the extras turn out quite expensive when all added up.


Tend to agree especially when you don't work in the millionaire customer belt.
But before starting window cleaning  I wanted to start a business converting vans into campers at the
time it was going to cost £50000 just to get started and convert the first two vans.