Hi GarageGuy:
I went to your website, and I thought it was very well put together and well written. You might want to add an "s" onto the end of "care" on the page you're link leads to because it needs one.
Welcome to payless - carpet cleaning
A company that really care!
New York carpet cleaning, area rugs drapes &upholstery cleaning in NYC, NJ CT New Jersey Connecticut
As a landlord, I spend more time cleaning up after former tenants than anything else, and so I've found that the English language is lacking in a lot of words we need, but don't have. For example, in this photo, is there a word for the apparant change in colour exibited by the carpet because of the way the pile is leaning?
I fully understand what causes that change in colour, and I find that I often have to explain it to tenants (and the provincial government department that handles landlord / tenant disputes here in Manitoba), but I've never been able to find a word for it. What word do carpet cleaning contractors use for this?
Also, I'm curious about this section of your web site:
How Do We Clean?
Steam-cleaning is the tried and true way to remove even the toughest stains. By using hot water extraction machines, Pay Less Carpet Cleaners uses the most effective method in the carpet cleaning industry in a three-step process.
First, we pre-treat all spots and stains. This preliminary treatment helps us determine the source of the stain, enabling us to choose the best stain-lifter for your situation.
Next, we give the carpet a deep wash with our extraction machine and the selected detergents, providing a powerful wash that will penetrate right down to the roots of your carpet's deepest fibers.
Finally, our well-trained technicians will use our powerful vacuuming system to suck all the remaining moisture out of your carpet. This also acts as a second wash, by having your carpet undergo the process in reverse. Your Pay Less Carpet Cleaners technician will make sure to remove all of the detergents and eradicate extra humidity in your carpet, allowing the carpet to dry in hours, not days.
I have a TMI carpet extractor with two three stage vaccuum motors to extraction clean the carpets in my apartments. I wanted powerful suction so that I could remove as much moisture from my carpets as possible. That's because every cup of water left behind in my carpets after cleaning them in winter is another cup of water that's going to show up as condensation on my windows.
What does this "powerful vaccuum system" that removes the remaining moisture in the carpet consist of? I find that my carpets can sometimes take days to dry even in the summer despite the power vaccuum motors in my extractor, and that's simply because of high outdoor humidity. I'm curious as to what else I could do to lower the moisture content of my carpets after cleaning.
And, I seem to be tripping over the explanation given in the final paragraph. How does using a more powerful vaccuum "act as a second wash, by having your carpet undergo the process in reverse."
Clearly, the more soiled water you remove from the carpet, the cleaner the carpet will be when dry, but I fail to see how that can be construed as a second extraction cleaning, and especially how that can be construed as a second extraction cleaning being done in reverse? I feel I have a "powerful vaccuum system" available to me in the form of the vaccuum motors in my carpet extractor, and am wondering how you're system differs from mine, and what equipment you subsequently use to remove all the remaining water from the carpet, and how that equipment is able to extraction clean the carpet "in reverse"?
Thanks for any help you can be to me in these matters.