Open a door and then a window. Then stick a box fan so it blows air
out the window. Then use the compressor / air blow tool to blow all
the dust off everything, then most of the dust goes out the window!
This works great for around a stereo / TV where it gets all that dust
back behind the components. Also cleans off the remote controls and
things like a phone.
(I just did some dry-walling and had dust everywhere and the
compressor in the living room... which gave me the idea.)
I actually did this for the basement of my now-rental house as I moved out. I
used a very powerful box fan exhausting in one window, with a distant window
open for air supply, and blasted EVERYTHING with a "sandblaster" (no sand)
nozzle on my 5HP compressor. That basement had never been so clean - floor,
walls, and ceiling joist space. Spider webs - gone.
Why should only men do this easy way? Why not women?
Should not women as well as men use more powerful tools to get home
cleaning done faster?
To get women more time to work their high-and-increasingly-necessary
and usual employment outside the home? Or, as housewives, to have more
time for raising not-in-school children or to have some lives of their
own?
Advice to husbands of housewives: Don't hold secrets of ways to make it
easier or quicker for your housewives to do what you want them to do.
For that matter, husbands of housewives do better by chipping in with
home chores. If the wife sees the husband doing some of the work, enough
to give the wife added spare time, then the wife tends to get hornier!
Furthermore, hubby helping wife with unpleasant chores, sharing wife's
experience, gets wife and husband closer to each other in more than one
way, likely more horny!
--
- Don Klipstein (d...@misty.com)
I routinely use leaf blower to blow the dust bunnies out of old
computers I am resurrecting. Pop the lid, set them down in driveway, and
have at it.
Don't try a leaf blower in the basement however. (Cough, cough...) DAMHIKT.
--
aem sends...
Oh, I do that too, about once a year, to get winter sandpiles and
cobwebs and left-over orphan leaves out of the place. That big open door
makes all the difference. There was just no practical way to set up a
fast air exchange in my basement, the way it is chopped up. (I was
trying to be nice to the plumber I had scheduled in, by getting the
joist bays blown out.) I'd have to rent some fire-department style vent
fans with the ducts.
--
aem sends...
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"aemeijers" <aeme...@att.net> wrote in message
news:OK-dnfsr3fEow-jQ...@giganews.com...
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Bill" <billnoma...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:8tko2...@mid.individual.net...
No, you got the idea from the movie "Caddy Shack".
You use an air compressor to clear a clogged drain.
I've heard of some folks using a 3,000 PSI pressure washer
to clear a clogged toilet. Didn't open the drain any, but
the toilet was immediately clear of TP and other solids.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"HeyBub" <hey...@NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote in message
news:rqidnabQa8hK7-jQ...@earthlink.com...
A neighbor tried a pressure washer to clean the shower grout. Then he learned to
replace loose tile.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
<gfre...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:l1uan6p6amhegvi3e...@4ax.com...
On Mon, 7 Mar 2011 18:05:40 -0600, "HeyBub"
<hey...@NOSPAMgmail.com>
wrote:
>You use an air compressor to clear a clogged drain.
That can be dangerous. I lived in an apartment and tried a
CO2 fire
extinguisher to clear a plugged drain. It blew out a pipe in
the
utility room below. Things looked fine on my end.,
It took them a few days to figure out they had a problem but
it wasn't
pretty. The whole building was draining into that room.
They never figured out what happened
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Zootal" <nos...@spam.zootal.nospam.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9EA1B18B5B9Dno...@216.196.97.131...
I have used either compressed air or an electric blower many times in my
house after renovations. I have a large family room with a stamped concrete
floor. It's time to move everything out, blow it out, blow it out again,
mop very wetly, wet vac, mop very wetly, wet vac, mop last time with clear
water, let air dry for two days, blow it out again, apply final sealer coat.
Good for 3-5 years. About 275 sf.
Those silk plants, and complex fake plastic things clean very well with
compressed air, also. Lots of things. Just have vent fans going, or you
are only moving it around.
SteveB
Heart surgery pending?
Read up and prepare.
Download the book $10
http://cabgbypasssurgery.com
I have an outside air hose by the back steps. A quick "scan" with the blaster
nozzle gets all the crud out of the tread of my shoes before I go inside after
gardening. I probably use more air on that than anything else. The 10 foot
copper pipe, adjustable end nozzle gutter cleaner runs a close second.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Zootal" <nos...@spam.zootal.nospam.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9EA1B501B5F7Cno...@216.196.97.131...
Good idea!
Men should buy their wife an air compressor. That sounds like an
excellent gift for Christmas, birthday, or anniversary.
<stuff snipped>
> I have an outside air hose by the back steps. A quick "scan" with the
blaster
> nozzle gets all the crud out of the tread of my shoes before I go inside
after
> gardening. I probably use more air on that than anything else. The 10 foot
> copper pipe, adjustable end nozzle gutter cleaner runs a close second.
What great ideas. I was looking for an excuse to buy an auto-retracting air
hose to mount below the porch and now I have it. Tell me more about the air
powered gutter cleaning wand. Home brew or COTS?
--
Bobby G.
Home brew. Air fitting and ball valve on one end of a 1/2" copper pipe. On the
other end, a female thread fitting. Into that I screwed two threaded PVC street
ells and a nozzle I made by heating a few inches of copper tube and clamping it
around a nail, then pulling the nail out. The 2 street ells allow the nozzle to
be pointed any way I want, and can form a "hook" that helps guide it along the
gutter edge.
Thanks for the inspiration. That sounds a lot less wieldy than the
cob job of leaf-blower, vac hose, and 2" PVC that I use to get up to
my 20foot high gutters.
And it might even work a tad better on my maple & oak droppings.
Jim
A 20 foot length of 1/2" copper will be unwieldly with high air pressure. Even
the 10 foot one I have can get out of control when the air flow is on if I'm not
careful. The copper can flex quite a bit.
Why do women insist on using those mops and brushes that are about 8" wide?
I like the Navy swabbie type mops, and the 24" wide soft bristle brooms to
cover large areas of hard flooring. Gets it done quick, and does a good
job. But women tend to like those toothbrush sized utensils.
She WAS impressed at the way compressed air cleans off the silk plants, and
some of the statuary that has a lot of nooks and crannies. And I think she
actually uses it when I'm not around, but she denies doing so. But I can
tell by the way she coils the hose............. ;-)
Go figger.
Steve
Heart surgery pending?
Read up and prepare.
http://cabgbypasssurgery.com
www.heartsurgerysurvivalguide.com
Wait 'til she starts using your razor blades to sharpen her eyebrow pencils.
You'll know.
Thanks for the info! How do you keep from getting a face full of gutter
muck? That's been the issue with the water driven method I occasionally
use. Every once in a while, I get a backscatter of muck which is much
better fertilizer than it is face cream.
I was almost going to get a IRobot gutter sweeper but it looked like more
trouble than it was worth.
Is there any truly "no maintenance" gutter system out there? A long
motorized auger running the length of the gutter might work. I know the
screens don't work. Stuff catches on them and the water runs right over
them.
--
Bobby G. (an On Topic thread! We're running almost 50% off topic these
days. Where's our statistician? We need to know what the OT signal to
noise ratio is)
Yes, I recall making a wand for the hose that was about 16' long and getting
my first face full of muck. That puppy sure did kick. The problem seems to
be that to make it rigid enough not to flex, you would have to make it too
heavy to use. I was going to try finned tubing to see if that added enough
rigidity to make it useful, but I never was able to find any. (This was in
the dark, pre-Internet days of the early 80's.) Besides, the backslash
ended my enthusiasm for power flushing the gutter.
--
Bobby G.
My cedar gutters make cleaning a lot easier. There are no supports in the
gutter, so I can just slide the air nozzle along, pushing the crud away from me.
It is best to clean when the gutters are dry. The crud blows out easier and
doesn't stick to everything it hits. I can clean the main floor gutters in 1/2
hour or less. That's probably about 180 feet of gutter. I have to set up a
ladder for the second floor, which is probably about 80 feet, and probably takes
me a bit longer.
That's a pretty big "secret weapon" against muck kickbacks. I always get
into trouble in the area around the gutter supports. Still, it's worth a
try . . .
> It is best to clean when the gutters are dry. The crud blows out easier
and
> doesn't stick to everything it hits. I can clean the main floor gutters in
1/2
> hour or less. That's probably about 180 feet of gutter. I have to set up a
> ladder for the second floor, which is probably about 80 feet, and probably
takes
> me a bit longer.
Sounds like it's worth a shot. I'll post if I decide to build my own air
pressure wand. I wonder if there's some way to build a gutter "pig" like
the ones they use in pipelines. Something that sits up there with a pull
rope on each side that I can use to drag the assembly from side to side.
It's hard to believe so little progress has been made in gutter cleaning
since gutters were first implemented.
--
Bobby G.
When I hit the lotto and build my dream house- No Gutters! Big
overhangs, yard sloped away from house, and something that won't form
ruts at the drip lines. In the neighborhoods around my other house down
in Lake Charles, no more than 1/3 of the houses even have gutters at
all. And it rains a lot down there. The trees also drop leaves pretty
much year around, in spurts. (Kinda like a shedding dog.) The
gutterless houses generally have a skinny gravel-filled trench at drip
line, or a row of thirsty-species bushes, sometimes in 1950s style long
skinny planter boxes.
--
aem sends...
This house doesn't have gutters (exposed, fake, rafter ends) and the trench at
the drip line is a PITA (as is the mud sprayed back on the brick). I'm adding
pavers around the front and one side to deflect the rain. I'll eventually
replace the mulch in the beds with rock and bury the pavers.