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Date: 14 Oct 2006 12:30:41
From: Cyclopath! - Keiron
Subject: pressure washer
hi all,

looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
whether or not this product exists?

thanks






 
Date: 17 Oct 2006 04:01:10
From: Werehatrack
Subject: Re: pressure washer
On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 12:30:41 GMT, "Cyclopath! - Keiron"
<keironk@mail.com > wrote:

>hi all,
>
>looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
>somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
>bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
>whether or not this product exists?

Pressure washers typically have nozzle pressures of 1200 to 3500 psi.
If you could build an economical and useful size of pressure vessel
(say, three gallon capacity with another one and one half of air
space) that could be filled with water or cleaning solution, any
hand-operated pump that you used to pressurize it would likely take a
week's worth of pumping to get the vessel up to that kind of
pressure...and the stream would lose pressure quickly as the enclosed
volume of liquid was reduced during the spraying process.

No, such a device does not exist as an off-the-shelf product, nor
would it be practical to build one.


--
Typoes are a feature, not a bug.
Some gardening required to reply via email.
Words processed in a facility that contains nuts.


 
Date: 16 Oct 2006 22:41:11
From: Chris Y.F.N.W.
Subject: Re: pressure washer
Group: rec.bicycles.misc Date: Sat, Oct 14, 2006, 12:30pm (EDT+4) From:
keironk@mail.com (Cyclopath!=A0-=A0Keiron)

>hi all,
>
>looking to get a pressure washer for my
>bike but was rather hoping to find
>somthing which is non-electric and that
>requires pumping by hand or with a
>bicycle pump. My google search reveals
>nothing but does anyone else know
>whether or not this product exists?
>thanks

A pressure washer? just what do you get into that would require that
kind of pressure? Why not try a hosepipe with a garden nozzle?

- -
Compliments of:
"Your Friendly Neighborhood Wheelman"

If you want to E-mail me use:
ChrisZCorner "at" webtv "dot" net

My website:
http://geocities.com/czcorner



 
Date: 15 Oct 2006 00:13:16
From: SMS
Subject: Re: pressure washer
Cyclopath! - Keiron wrote:
> hi all,
>
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?

Why on earth would you want to spray high pressure water at your bicycle?


  
Date: 15 Oct 2006 07:06:19
From: catzz66
Subject: Re: pressure washer
SMS wrote:
> Cyclopath! - Keiron wrote:
>
>> hi all,
>>
>> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to
>> find
>> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or
>> with a
>> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
>> whether or not this product exists?
>
>
> Why on earth would you want to spray high pressure water at your bicycle?

He's been warned about high pressure spraying more than once already. A
garden sprayer would do the trick and allow him to mist his frame if
that is what he is trying to do.

I use a household sprayer (like Windex comes in) to wash my bike frame.


 
Date: 14 Oct 2006 20:46:21
From: Mike Jacoubowsky
Subject: Re: pressure washer
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?


As others have noted, pressure washers (or even putting your thumb over the
end of a hose to get a lot of pressure) can do great damage to bicycle
parts, specifically anything with a seal over a bearing (sleeve or
ball-bearing, doesn't matter).We see the end result frequently.

"Seals" as found on bicycle components are designed, at best, to keep
splashed water out of bearing surfaces etc. There are few examples in the
real world of times when water would be propelled at your bicycle at
anywhere near the velocity that a pressure sprayer (or your thumb over a
garden hose) can accomplish.

To those who have seen the mechanics on the Pro Tour doing such things to
bicycles, keep in mind that THEY DON'T CARE how long the stuff lasts... they
just want it to work well for the next day. They replace stuff all the time,
including entire wheels just because they wrecked the bearings over the
course of a few days of intense "cleaning." I've been there, I've seen it,
I've spoken with the mechanics. It's a terribly wasteful way to do things,
but it's also very fast, and speed is important when you've got a whole
team's worth of bikes to get ready for the next day after a day in the muck.

--Mike Jacoubowsky
Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReaction.com
Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA

"Cyclopath! - Keiron" <keironk@mail.com > wrote in message
news:RL4Yg.8164$hy2.7906@newsfe4-win.ntli.net...
> hi all,
>
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?
>
> thanks
>
>




 
Date: 14 Oct 2006 15:32:22
From: catzz66
Subject: Re: pressure washer
Cyclopath! - Keiron wrote:
> hi all,
>
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?
>
> thanks
>
>

A common garden sprayer would work for this purpose. I'd want to be
sure to label it so that it would not be used for anything but spraying
water.


 
Date: 14 Oct 2006 14:58:13
From: noweldrecumbent
Subject: Re: pressure washer
I second that comment, I just gently wash off loose dirt with a hose, and
wipe it dry with a rag afterwards.
David
http://www.noweldrecumbent.com

"Cyclopath! - Keiron" <keironk@mail.com > wrote in message
news:RL4Yg.8164$hy2.7906@newsfe4-win.ntli.net...
> hi all,
>
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?
>
> thanks
>
>




 
Date: 14 Oct 2006 09:37:46
From: Pat in TX
Subject: Re: pressure washer

"Cyclopath! - Keiron" <keironk@mail.com > wrote in message
news:RL4Yg.8164$hy2.7906@newsfe4-win.ntli.net...
> hi all,
>
> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
> whether or not this product exists?
>
> thanks

One other poster wrote that using a pressure washer forced water into places
on the bike where water is not supposed to be. You might want to rethink
this idea of using a pressure washer on the delicate parts of your bike.

Pat in TX
>
>




  
Date: 14 Oct 2006 20:43:42
From: R Brickston
Subject: Re: pressure washer
>"Cyclopath! - Keiron" <keironk@mail.com> wrote in message
>news:RL4Yg.8164$hy2.7906@newsfe4-win.ntli.net...
>> hi all,
>>
>> looking to get a pressure washer for my bike but was rather hoping to find
>> somthing which is non-electric and that requires pumping by hand or with a
>> bicycle pump. My google search reveals nothing but does anyone else know
>> whether or not this product exists?
>>
>> thanks
>

Spray bottle.