Well my wife is finally out of the hospital and got her home! She was restless so I started digging around online trying to come up with something for washing/rinsing. I'm not going to slap down $400 on a CR spotless system and there's a lot of talk about the DIY systems that imitate them that, after all is said and done will still end up costing me $250-300. So I got to thinking, and this will only work if my idea about my pressure washer works. The last time I used my pressure washer I remember my wife turning off the water while I was still using the unit, unknown to me. Well I look down and see the hose had completely flattened out due to lack of water. This tells me the washer sucked the water out of the hose. Now with that said my idea is this:
I have a few 55 gallon plastic barrels I used to use for rain water collection. What if I took the idea from this setup except only using one (maybe 2 later on) housing units with the DI resin in it to slowly fill at least one of the 55 gallon barrels with pure DI water. The barrels already have a male adapter hose part on the bottom so all I would have to do is hook my hose from the pressure washer up to it, turn on the water from the barrel to run to the pressure washer and run the pressure washer. THEORETICALLY it should suck the DI water out of the barrel, into the pressure washer and rinse my truck off nicely.....right? The unit I was going to use was from HomeDepot seen here or similar. The tube the gentleman uses on his website looks pretty straight forward. I simple TDS stick meter would tell me if I've done this properly and my costs would be very minimal. I would recharge the resin as needed using this method. Any thoughts or ideas on this? I don't need much, just something enough for 1-2 cars every few weeks. Of course none of this will work if my initial idea of the pressure washer NOT taking the water from the barrels doesn't work. So all in all, this might be a $50ish project till I get to the recharge phase. We'll wait and see, and hope.
See what happens when I get bored. Still working on that air powered pad dryer I started on years ago. A lot of personal issues came to my life 18 months ago so that project was put on hold. After I get settled back into my work bench downstairs that is another project I will continue to work on! Till then, I have this project! Thanks guys for taking the time to read this. I know some of you are DIY guys so this would be right down your alley.
I have a few 55 gallon plastic barrels I used to use for rain water collection. What if I took the idea from this setup except only using one (maybe 2 later on) housing units with the DI resin in it to slowly fill at least one of the 55 gallon barrels with pure DI water. The barrels already have a male adapter hose part on the bottom so all I would have to do is hook my hose from the pressure washer up to it, turn on the water from the barrel to run to the pressure washer and run the pressure washer. THEORETICALLY it should suck the DI water out of the barrel, into the pressure washer and rinse my truck off nicely.....right? The unit I was going to use was from HomeDepot seen here or similar. The tube the gentleman uses on his website looks pretty straight forward. I simple TDS stick meter would tell me if I've done this properly and my costs would be very minimal. I would recharge the resin as needed using this method. Any thoughts or ideas on this? I don't need much, just something enough for 1-2 cars every few weeks. Of course none of this will work if my initial idea of the pressure washer NOT taking the water from the barrels doesn't work. So all in all, this might be a $50ish project till I get to the recharge phase. We'll wait and see, and hope.
See what happens when I get bored. Still working on that air powered pad dryer I started on years ago. A lot of personal issues came to my life 18 months ago so that project was put on hold. After I get settled back into my work bench downstairs that is another project I will continue to work on! Till then, I have this project! Thanks guys for taking the time to read this. I know some of you are DIY guys so this would be right down your alley.