Hi Gary
My friend was doing a 3rd story set of windows. He says a gust of very strong wind suddenly sprung up and that there was virtually no wind before that. The gust took the pole sideways and he took about 20 sideways steps wih it. Had it then come down it would have been onto the glass roof of a restaurant front. He says he struggled for a minute or so then the wind dropped and he carried on but he can remember a twinge of pain in his upper back. He canceled his work for the rest of that day because that twinge rapidly became seious pain.
Two weeks later he had an operation to try and rejoin some tendons or something. He's still in severe agony most of the time and yes, he had been on 2 proper training courses.
He's now seen loads of specialists etc etc and he will not work again and the pain will be there untill he dies.
Im am inclined to entirely disagree with you here. You sweeping statement about ' WFP not the be all and end all' is in fact your opinion based upon NO EXPERIENCE whatsoever!
It is not a sweeping statement but obvious. And just how do you know I have no experience what so ever? Have you been with me every second for the past 3 years?
Please explain to me how you'd clean windows on the 3rd floor in a large shopping center while it is open? Take the vehicle up in the lift?
That is partly what I meant.
Also, I cannot believe I know the only w/c in England to sustain an injury due to WFP's?
Pulling a resistance whilst holding a heavy'ish weight in an unatural position and then moving that weight up and down in front of you especially while looking upwards? I suggest you ask someone like an osteopath about that one for yourself.
That is the other part of what I meant.
If you gave me the choice of potential injury from WFP's or potential injury from the top of a ladder it is obvious what I would choose but that does not mean WFP's are the answer to everything window cleaning with zero risks and zero drawbacks. That was nearer to my point which you seemed to have missed. Not - is, or are, WFP's better than or worse than the traditional methods. Or are you implying there is no injury risk and also especially no drawbacks with WFP's which you seem to have done from the quote below?
So my dear Rosskesava - by the time you get your new system i for 1 will be very pleased to hear you say you still use tradional methods when your WFp equipment is quicker, better, cleaner and much much more profitable.
Again - the 3rd floor of a shopping center when it can only be done when open? How about a very large 4 storey building with 5ft wide balconies in front of every window? Or the basement windows (80 large paines) that has iron bars at street level all around it and the only access is either a lift or internal stairs.
I'm also not your 'dear' anything. That is obvious sarcasm and from my point of view - it has no place on this forum. The next paragraph is meant to be sarcastic so as you know I know what you are doing. Just try to ignore it in the same way you wanted me not to be able to reply to your posting. I bet you just have to reply to something in this posting.
I realise you are a proffessional and possibly afflicted with company lingo and putdowns as a matter of course but your last comment (the drab one below about what can WFP do for you) made me think that all that went before was a typical glib sales pitch that also made you feel good when you read what you'd wrote. Why write the company name after your posting? Are you feeling that you need beat your chest to show that you can prove you are the best and can only be right? I have no such stamps after my name - just a simple 'Ross'. The words 'Pinnacled Proffessional Cleaning Ltd' makes you obviously an expert and I am in awe of your wisdom.
Read this post again and ask yourself not what you can't do with WFP but what WFP can do for you
And .... we will be buying a system later this year.
Also, Easycleanwindows - we use all that standard stuff with ladders as our veiw is that the small cost of improving safety with ladders is always worth it and I would be very happy if I never went up a ladder again and sod the work we may (or may not) loose.
Ross