Richie, I can give you a quick list, but do yourself a favor and do a little reading on the TruckMounters Forum, there is several hours of machine and tool enhancements and it's tailored to guys running TM units.
First off, make sure the unit is running max. revs for the engine according to engine Mfg.
Set your vacuum relief spring to the blower Mfgs. Maximum setting (ie 15"hg) this is just tightening the spring off the blower inlet
If your blower has a 2.5" port (intake and exhaust) make sure you preserve that diameter of pipe
as far as possible down the line, only reduce to 2" when near the wand (last 25-50') and use a 2" wand if you have the budget for it, Prochem makes good wands.
You will likely need to change out the waste tank fitting to support some 2.5" hose, and source some flexible 2.5" hose (HydraMaster stocks it). (pic below)
After optimizing the vacuum system, then you can focus on your solution, what is the total flow of your wand jets?
All things being equal and assuming you've got a properly fitted glide already, you will have net
drier carpets if you flow
more solution, so you are likely in for a wand jet size increase.
Bump up your flow at least to the next level. ie: if you have a 2 jet wand and the numbers read 9502 on each, you want 95
03 on your new jets, and possibly 95
04 if your heat will keep up (which it may not). We'll deal with heat later, let's get your flow dialed in first, water cleans so lets use some.
Even if your Temp. gauge shows a 40ºf drop with the higher flow, you
will have hotter solution
At the carpet, there is more energy being communicated in the process of the high flow rinsing. You will only go from maybe 3 liters per min, to about 4 liters, but it will clean better and you will have less need to make a 3rd cleaning pass or a 4th for that matter, this will also result in a labor savings.
Next is either getting a better wand, or a Post heater, cause if you have real high heat you will also clean faster assuming the volume is there (flow) and real heat will dry faster and make greasy jobs childs play, so more on heat later....start with the low cost upgrades first.