Window cleaning
Posted by: Mick P on 25 June 2005
Chaps
Window cleaners are rarer than chickens teeth in this neck of the woods and I doubt if we have seen a window cleaner for over 5 years.
One called on my door the other night and asked for £25 to clean them. I thought bugger that and declined. He drove off in his flash sports car.
I have had enough of cleaning the things using ladders etc and though it time to invest a a good semi professional quality kit with a telescopic pole and screw on brushes and rubbers etc.
I done a search on google and there are dozens ranging from a few quid up to a couple of hundred.
This forum seems to be the font of all good knowledge, so I am hoping if anyone can make a good recommendation.
Regards
Mick
Window cleaners are rarer than chickens teeth in this neck of the woods and I doubt if we have seen a window cleaner for over 5 years.
One called on my door the other night and asked for £25 to clean them. I thought bugger that and declined. He drove off in his flash sports car.
I have had enough of cleaning the things using ladders etc and though it time to invest a a good semi professional quality kit with a telescopic pole and screw on brushes and rubbers etc.
I done a search on google and there are dozens ranging from a few quid up to a couple of hundred.
This forum seems to be the font of all good knowledge, so I am hoping if anyone can make a good recommendation.
Regards
Mick
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Polarbear
Mick,
£25 to clean the whole house isn't that bad actually. I pay that just to clean 5 windows at my office.
I suppose its like everything else you either pay someone to do it or you do it yourself.
A bucket of water a sponge and plenty of elbow grease costs nothing.
Regards
PB
£25 to clean the whole house isn't that bad actually. I pay that just to clean 5 windows at my office.
I suppose its like everything else you either pay someone to do it or you do it yourself.
A bucket of water a sponge and plenty of elbow grease costs nothing.
Regards
PB
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Mick P
PB
Cleaning the upstairs windows is the problem and whilst walking around in London I have seen several cleaners using telescopic poles which eliminates the need for a ladder.
I have 15 windows so perhaps £25 is not too bad but thats £300pa and I could buy a good cleaning kit for that.
Regards
Mick
Cleaning the upstairs windows is the problem and whilst walking around in London I have seen several cleaners using telescopic poles which eliminates the need for a ladder.
I have 15 windows so perhaps £25 is not too bad but thats £300pa and I could buy a good cleaning kit for that.
Regards
Mick
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by HTK
True, but you'd still have to do it yourself. What's your time worth? There was shock and horror here (though not in this house)when the window cleaner raised prices from £5 to £6.50 - outrageous! Next time someone moans to me I'll mention the Swindon experience.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Mick P
HTK
Mrs Mick would actually do the cleaning as she is now only working part time and I am away for 13 hours each day with commuting time taken into account.
Also she can clean the windows to suit herself.
I was thinking of something like this
http://www.hgpromotions.com/window_conservatory_cleaning.php
Regards
Mick
Mrs Mick would actually do the cleaning as she is now only working part time and I am away for 13 hours each day with commuting time taken into account.
Also she can clean the windows to suit herself.
I was thinking of something like this
http://www.hgpromotions.com/window_conservatory_cleaning.php
Regards
Mick
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
I just buy stronger lightbulbs, innit.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
You can see right through him can't you Sir ?
Fritz Von More transparency that's what we need, innit !
Fritz Von More transparency that's what we need, innit !
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Paul Hutchings
Surely cleaning the windows themselves is the easy bit so long as you have a ladder or a long enough pole?
£25 is quite scary, admittedly we're talking about ten years ago but the last time we had a Windows Cleaner I'm sure he charged about four quid to do a four-bedroom house.
I find the frames to be the real sod.
£25 is quite scary, admittedly we're talking about ten years ago but the last time we had a Windows Cleaner I'm sure he charged about four quid to do a four-bedroom house.
I find the frames to be the real sod.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Stephen B
Mine charges £3.00 (3 bed Semi). I hope he doesn't read this forum.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Stoik
quote:Originally posted by Stephen B:
Mine charges £3.00 (3 bed Semi). I hope he doesn't read this forum.
Not a chance, he surely can't afford a Naim gear with this salary, and probably not a computer too, unless he does at least 20 customers like you per work day.
I hope you don't ask him back the change for your 5 pounds bill...
Bye.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
Oooh, it's filthy! Give it a wipe[/B]
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Stephen B
quote:I hope you don't ask him back the change for your 5 pounds bill...
Not at Christmas.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Nime
I can assure you that cleaning glass with a long pole is anything but easy. I've tried it on my inaccessible upstairs windows and conservatory roof. The problem is lack of space to wield the damn pole and to put some pressure on the glass.
Consider the action of your paid window cleaners. They use a side-to-side sweeping motion with their mop head to throughly wet the window and remove residual muck. Then they use a sweeping wrist-turning motion to squeegee the window dry and clean right out to the edges and corners of the glass and along the bottom. Leaving clean glass surface without smears.
With a long pole you are limited to straight up and down motions. ("thrusts" if you will ) Even using a strong, lightweight alloy pole you cannot remotely duplicate the motions of a competent window cleaner.
I can recommend that you buy a high quality squegee head though. We paid about £12 for a small one only 6-7" wide in stainless steel and quality rubber for our small-paned cottage wondows. This came from a specialist cleaning shop in the city. Such a head will outlast your usual supermarket/DIY store quality well beyond the difference in price.
If you can find a specialist cleaning materials & tools shop locally it would be well worth asking for their professional advice. Then try out the kit before parting with your ill-gotten gains.
Buying online you haven't a clue what the quality is like. If you are really hard-up you can buy your own alloy pole from an aerial supplier. It won't be telescopic but when the pennies really count as they do in your case Sir Mick....
Consider the action of your paid window cleaners. They use a side-to-side sweeping motion with their mop head to throughly wet the window and remove residual muck. Then they use a sweeping wrist-turning motion to squeegee the window dry and clean right out to the edges and corners of the glass and along the bottom. Leaving clean glass surface without smears.
With a long pole you are limited to straight up and down motions. ("thrusts" if you will ) Even using a strong, lightweight alloy pole you cannot remotely duplicate the motions of a competent window cleaner.
I can recommend that you buy a high quality squegee head though. We paid about £12 for a small one only 6-7" wide in stainless steel and quality rubber for our small-paned cottage wondows. This came from a specialist cleaning shop in the city. Such a head will outlast your usual supermarket/DIY store quality well beyond the difference in price.
If you can find a specialist cleaning materials & tools shop locally it would be well worth asking for their professional advice. Then try out the kit before parting with your ill-gotten gains.
Buying online you haven't a clue what the quality is like. If you are really hard-up you can buy your own alloy pole from an aerial supplier. It won't be telescopic but when the pennies really count as they do in your case Sir Mick....
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
He'll have those gnomes up there, on kids wages, innit.
Fritz von another successfull Christopher St Day in Berlin today (Gay Mayor and all still) bit warm at 35°C, though 300,000 + still managed to dance the day tollerantly away (FREE) innit:
Fritz von another successfull Christopher St Day in Berlin today (Gay Mayor and all still) bit warm at 35°C, though 300,000 + still managed to dance the day tollerantly away (FREE) innit:
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by MichaelC
Use the window cleaner.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Steve Toy
My window cleaner (who also drives taxis at weekends) charges me £8 to clean the bungalow including the conservatory out the back. He doesn't need poles for my place (obviously) but he's got them. He brings his own filtered water that neither smears nor leaves a residue to which dirt in the atmosphere can cling.
Posted on: 25 June 2005 by Stephen B
I doubt whether my window cleaner could afford a water filter.
Posted on: 26 June 2005 by Nime
I knew a window cleaner in a previous life. They worked part-time on their rounds when they weren't doing their normal shiftwork job. As I remember they made several times the basic wage of your average Postman Mick for just a few hours extra work each day. Most ran nice cars, bought nice houses and took their holidays in the sun. Accidents on ladders seemed to be the main reason for abandoning the gravy train. The round would then be sold off with goodwill to the next willing candidate in the very long queue waiting in the wings. This was several decades ago so conditions may have changed with the recent influx of over-qualified Transylvanian window cleaners willing to work nights. I think I'd probably try asking for £25 too after a quick look at Mick's adobe. He'd probably want his fleet of stretched limo's detailed too for the same price.
Posted on: 26 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
Poles are cheaper Mick
Posted on: 27 June 2005 by Bruce Woodhouse
Mick, have you suggested Mrs Mick does the chimney in her spare time too. Saves paying for the little scroat from the estate being sent up and having to be pulled out by his feet every year (although lighting a fire underneath them works well, and has the benefit of producing heat too).
Bruce, unhelpfully
Bruce, unhelpfully
Posted on: 27 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
Coupla lads with Mungo Jerry haircuts and 5 ASBO's to their names (B Grade)on a rope, up and down a few times, and Mick's yer uncle
Fritz Von I bet Our Mick's sitting on a train in a tunnel at the moment, lights gone orf, and he's dying for a jimmy riddle, but the bogs out of order, and he's thinking, Christ, It's nearly Christmas atready I really must get the chim chim cheroo cleaned, innit. I've heard the poor old girl he kicked on the sdztreet earlier in the year from his second UK house., is now squatting in his Spanish one, on the Costa Del Funny-Handshake
Fritz Von I bet Our Mick's sitting on a train in a tunnel at the moment, lights gone orf, and he's dying for a jimmy riddle, but the bogs out of order, and he's thinking, Christ, It's nearly Christmas atready I really must get the chim chim cheroo cleaned, innit. I've heard the poor old girl he kicked on the sdztreet earlier in the year from his second UK house., is now squatting in his Spanish one, on the Costa Del Funny-Handshake
Posted on: 27 June 2005 by Rockingdoc
The appearance of telescopic poles is due to the fact that many London window cleaners have been absorbed into companies i.e. are employed. It is no longer safe as an employer to ask employees to work up ladders in case they fall.
B&Q stock the full range of professional window cleaning equipment. As has been suggested, you need a good quality string/rag mop on a pole for the cleaning, and a good quality squeegy on a pole for the drying.
B&Q stock the full range of professional window cleaning equipment. As has been suggested, you need a good quality string/rag mop on a pole for the cleaning, and a good quality squeegy on a pole for the drying.
Posted on: 27 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
Reminds me of a basketball game I once saw in Warsaw !
Fritz Von Wotta Crib they had
'telescopic Poles'
Fritz Von Wotta Crib they had
'telescopic Poles'
Posted on: 28 June 2005 by Nime
German Police report: Fat man found grinning, but comatose, on the pavement outside Polish Embassy. The Berlin Police are reported to have received repeated complaints of a man jumping up and down and grinning at his own reflection in the highly-polished embassy windows. It is believed he was beaten with B&Q cleaning appparatus smuggled in by the highly-popular Polish basketball team looking for a sideline to supplement their very low wages in comparison with Western players. This brutal, but effective act of charity is not expected to have any effect on Polish accession to the EU.
Posted on: 28 June 2005 by Berlin Fritz
Talking of Glaziers, there's a successful Yank and his boys doin pretty well now up Manchester Way I hear ?
Posted on: 28 June 2005 by wellyspyder
Shame on you all! Just like disc copying, complaining about the "pennies" but spending pounds on NAIM gear.
Oh dear! I am in for it now?
Oh dear! I am in for it now?