Bryce C
DFW
Hey y'all. While I'm not approaching restaurants for commercial work, 2 of them fell into our lap by befriending the owner while my wife and I were having breakfast there a few weeks ago. Thankfully they are each breakfast/lunch joints that close at 2pm.
The owner admittedly neglected the carpeting in the smaller diner that we just cleaned. Not the nicer one I met him at. This was a great place to practice and pull out bigger guns. So I used full strength Saigers Code Red boosted with Bridgepoint's Citrus Solv 2. I think it was pretty effective. Had the heat on my PEX portable at full blast and the psi at 250 hoping to not overwet the low pile carpet while trying to penetrate several years of impacted grease.
Wondering what techniques you would use to effectively clean greasy and neglected carpets without overwetting them. I'm guessing extended dwell time, fiery chemistry, and mechanical agitation would help a lot but I don't wish to taint a shiny crb with ancient restaurant grease that we bring in to high end residential. We setup air movers and hung out an extra 30 minutes when it was done to help accelerate the drying process. The owner was impressed and told me the carpets were dry the next morning, that was a relief. Anyways, any thoughts or tips?

The owner admittedly neglected the carpeting in the smaller diner that we just cleaned. Not the nicer one I met him at. This was a great place to practice and pull out bigger guns. So I used full strength Saigers Code Red boosted with Bridgepoint's Citrus Solv 2. I think it was pretty effective. Had the heat on my PEX portable at full blast and the psi at 250 hoping to not overwet the low pile carpet while trying to penetrate several years of impacted grease.
Wondering what techniques you would use to effectively clean greasy and neglected carpets without overwetting them. I'm guessing extended dwell time, fiery chemistry, and mechanical agitation would help a lot but I don't wish to taint a shiny crb with ancient restaurant grease that we bring in to high end residential. We setup air movers and hung out an extra 30 minutes when it was done to help accelerate the drying process. The owner was impressed and told me the carpets were dry the next morning, that was a relief. Anyways, any thoughts or tips?
