Model: Tool Daily Foam Cannon with 1/4 inch Quick Connector, 1 Liter, 5 Pressure Washer Nozzle Tips
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Do yourself a favor and buy one with a wide mouth bottle. The narrow mouth bottle works fine but can be a pain to fill and clean.
I never have any problems, also not sure how good of a long term idea that is, cause all the cannons I ever used seemed to have a standard thread and bottle, so if your bottle breaks you could literally go to the $1 store and get another one, with a wide mouth finding replacements might be more difficult and costly.
Bought this for same price last year. I don't have anything else to compare it to, but it gets the job done.
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I bought this two years ago for about the same price without the little nozzles. I have never used another foam canon to compare but it seems to work well with regular non foaming car soap.
Unless your pressure washer calls for a 2.5 orifice nozzle, this set could cause problems for your pump.
Read your your owner's manual. Each pressure washer pumps a certain amount of water per minute and the rated pressure produced at the nozzle, is based on orifice size. If the orifice is too small, the pump goes in partial bypass, meaning, you cut back on the volume of water exiting the nozzle. If the nozzle orifice is too large, you don't reach the rated pressure.
Just stick to what your owner's manual says. You and your pump will be happier for it.
Retired commercial pressure washer tech.
The downvote is from someone who's clueless.
People like that kept us pressure washer techs busy.
Unless your pressure washer calls for a 2.5 orifice nozzle, this set could cause problems for your pump.
Read your your owner's manual. Each pressure washer pumps a certain amount of water per minute and the rated pressure produced at the nozzle, is based on orifice size. If the orifice is too small, the pump goes in partial bypass, meaning, you cut back on the volume of water exiting the nozzle. If the nozzle orifice is too large, you don't reach the rated pressure.
Just stick to what your owner's manual says. You and your pump will be happier for it.
Retired commercial pressure washer tech.
The downvote is from someone who's clueless.
They kept us pressure washer techs busy.
That doesnt make sense. Most nozzles are 1mm and the detergent nozzle they usually come with is 3.2-3.8mm. All pressure washers are rated to support the various nozzles, don't even get me started with all the brushes, concrete cleaners and other peripherals that have even wider range of orifice sizes... Will pressure be different for each? Absolutely, that's what you actually want. You don't want your foam cannon or wheel brush shooting out water at 4000 psi so the orifice they have is much bigger lol
That doesnt make sense. Most nozzles are 1mm and the detergent nozzle they usually come with is 3.2-3.8mm. All pressure washers are rated to support the various nozzles, don't even get me started with all the brushes, concrete cleaners and other peripherals that have even wider range of orifice sizes...
I worked with various pressure washers that used nozzles from 3.5 to 15, based on the GPM and rated pressure.
A common practice is to use a larger nozzle which will reduce the amount of pressure to ensure operators do not damage the cleaning surface. However, when a nozzle is larger than specified for the machine it will not produce the amount of pressure the machine is rated for. If a machine is designed to run a 3.0 nozzle and a 6.0 is used instead, effectively the amount of pressure will be reduced by 50%, which reduces efficiency and increases the amount of time needed for cleaning… in other words more labor, more costs.
When a nozzle is smaller than specified for the machine the effects vary depending on if it is a gas engine or electric motor. The added pressure caused by the resistance of pushing water through a smaller orifice will overload an engine and cause premature wear and tear. Operation in this manner over an extended period of time can cause the engine to fail. On an electric motor, the increased resistance will increase the amp draw and cause breakers to trip, heat wiring, and potentially damage any electrical components on the machine.
Trust me, follow the manual. Nozzle orifice size is not just a suggestion.
Last year I bought a similar model to OP's. I tried using it last week after several months in storage and somehow all of the pressure backed up and caused foam to leak out around the bottle seal, then exploded the plastic bottle moments later.
Anyone know what could have caused this and/or send a link to a compatible bottle? I also imagine not just any bottle with compatible threading will work since it has to manage some pressure (?)
From my experience ANY bottle will work with the same threading, literally used a coca cola bottle one time when I was doing a car cause the neck broke on the bottle I was using and it fit, lol. The pressure gets regulated at a different part of the sprayer, so its just normal water mix in the bottle. What caused your issue was either the bottle had a hole or break in the thread, or the metal thread on your foam cannon is messed up so the metal foam cannon piece needs to be replaced if its user replaceable or if its not the whole cannon.
I don't know much about this product or the amount of pressure it has but here's a quick lesson I learned the other day from a pressure washer that used these SAME EXACT quick connectors.
I thought the quick connector was locked in place properly. I turned on the unit, pressed the pressure washer trigger, and the quick connector came shooting out like a bullet out of a gun. It was such a blur how fast it came out. Lucky when I pressed the trigger I was pointing at the ground. If I had aimed that at a car window it would have went right through it. If I pointed it at the car's metal body, a big dent would be in the car.
Be careful when using a pressure washer! Dangerous!
This does fit green works pressure washer, but you should definitely get the 1.1 orifice upgrade for it. I think there's a deal where you can the gun and the spray bottle with the tips. As for foam soap, use about 20 to 30 ml of any car wash soap, fill the rest of the bottle with water, then it should foam up nicely with the 1.1 upgrade.
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https://www.amazon.com/dp/B094F86...ct_de
Tool Daily Foam Cannon, 1/4 Inch Quick Connect, Power Washer Foam Cannon with 5 Pressure Washer Nozzles,1 Liter https://a.co/0JvhUVd
Not seeing the $4 couple, is it expired or targeted?
Read your your owner's manual. Each pressure washer pumps a certain amount of water per minute and the rated pressure produced at the nozzle, is based on orifice size. If the orifice is too small, the pump goes in partial bypass, meaning, you cut back on the volume of water exiting the nozzle. If the nozzle orifice is too large, you don't reach the rated pressure.
Just stick to what your owner's manual says. You and your pump will be happier for it.
Retired commercial pressure washer tech.
The downvote is from someone who's clueless.
People like that kept us pressure washer techs busy.
Read your your owner's manual. Each pressure washer pumps a certain amount of water per minute and the rated pressure produced at the nozzle, is based on orifice size. If the orifice is too small, the pump goes in partial bypass, meaning, you cut back on the volume of water exiting the nozzle. If the nozzle orifice is too large, you don't reach the rated pressure.
Just stick to what your owner's manual says. You and your pump will be happier for it.
Retired commercial pressure washer tech.
The downvote is from someone who's clueless.
They kept us pressure washer techs busy.
That doesnt make sense. Most nozzles are 1mm and the detergent nozzle they usually come with is 3.2-3.8mm. All pressure washers are rated to support the various nozzles, don't even get me started with all the brushes, concrete cleaners and other peripherals that have even wider range of orifice sizes... Will pressure be different for each? Absolutely, that's what you actually want. You don't want your foam cannon or wheel brush shooting out water at 4000 psi so the orifice they have is much bigger lol
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A common practice is to use a larger nozzle which will reduce the amount of pressure to ensure operators do not damage the cleaning surface. However, when a nozzle is larger than specified for the machine it will not produce the amount of pressure the machine is rated for. If a machine is designed to run a 3.0 nozzle and a 6.0 is used instead, effectively the amount of pressure will be reduced by 50%, which reduces efficiency and increases the amount of time needed for cleaning… in other words more labor, more costs.
When a nozzle is smaller than specified for the machine the effects vary depending on if it is a gas engine or electric motor. The added pressure caused by the resistance of pushing water through a smaller orifice will overload an engine and cause premature wear and tear. Operation in this manner over an extended period of time can cause the engine to fail. On an electric motor, the increased resistance will increase the amp draw and cause breakers to trip, heat wiring, and potentially damage any electrical components on the machine.
Trust me, follow the manual. Nozzle orifice size is not just a suggestion.
Anyone know what could have caused this and/or send a link to a compatible bottle? I also imagine not just any bottle with compatible threading will work since it has to manage some pressure (?)
I thought the quick connector was locked in place properly. I turned on the unit, pressed the pressure washer trigger, and the quick connector came shooting out like a bullet out of a gun. It was such a blur how fast it came out. Lucky when I pressed the trigger I was pointing at the ground. If I had aimed that at a car window it would have went right through it. If I pointed it at the car's metal body, a big dent would be in the car.
Be careful when using a pressure washer! Dangerous!
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=1.1+or...-doa-p_1_6