Drimaster Upholstery Tool Survey

danpauselius

Member
Joined
Oct 8, 2006
Messages
1,325
Yes and I use an internal jet tool for anything that is actually soiled. DM tool is good for some of the more delicate items.
 

B&BGaryC

Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2007
Messages
4,667
Name
B&BGaryC
Yes, have used.

Have now"? No

Will buy? Maybe later...

Happy with it? You bet!

Just yes or no? you oughta know me better than that.
 

B&BGaryC

Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2007
Messages
4,667
Name
B&BGaryC
danpauselius said:
Yes and I use an internal jet tool for anything that is actually soiled. DM tool is good for some of the more delicate items.

Call me a twit, but my favorite upholstery tool is actually an external jet prochem tool. On things that don't need to be "blasted", I just adjust the water, and spray a mist of rinse water over the pre-sprayed upholstery and extract it all. It still cleans like a son-of-a-gun and gets it done in no time flat.
 

Loren Egland

Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2006
Messages
1,287
Name
Loren Egland
No drimaster.

Have PMF internal jet tool and occasionally use it.

Have standard tool.

Have two styles of Hydroplane tool.

Have and use two styles of Hydrokinetic tool.

Loren
 

Michael Ellis

Member
Joined
Oct 8, 2006
Messages
113
Name
Michael Ellis
Yes...have two and pressure control is not a worry when duel cleaning. Safe agitation in forward and back stroke while lofting the fabric away from the batting and cushion make it a great tool. I could say dual but duel really makes sense since an upholstery and carpet or tile job done simultaneously is a duel in way :)
 

Terry

Supportive Member
Joined
May 18, 2007
Messages
574
Name
Terry O'Brien
yes easy to use among many advantages biggest negative is waste of water
 

Ron Werner

Member
Joined
Nov 25, 2006
Messages
8,726
Name
Ron Werner
Not any more. Its in my supply room. Hasn't been touched since Sept.

Bought the SteamWay Hydrokinetic with a glide. Blows the DM out of the water. Uses more water, leaves fabric drier. Can use all the heat and vacuum the TM produces.
 

Shorty

RIP
Joined
Nov 8, 2006
Messages
5,111
Name
Shorty Glanville
Quote:

"1 little nick on the metal plate and the spray is messed up"

Unquote:


Question, how are you going to get "1 little nick on the metal plate".

I thought we were cleaning fabric upholstery with this tool ??

I've had my old plastic (?) Drimaster for a bloody long time, and still not managed to stuff it up.

Then again, owner operators take more care of things that turn crap into dollars than what staff do :wink:

Ooroo from down under
chemwho2ya0.jpg
:roll:
 

Jack May

That Kiwi
Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
2,423
Name
John
Right on that one Shorty.

My original DM is about 6 years old and was going strong till I put it into the other van... STUFFED.

He thought a screw driver would clear out a few of those nicks.

The new DM is STILL NOT IN NZ :( empty promises. Last I heard was 4-6 weeks... I'll wait to see if they meant months. Apparently, HM have had supply issues keeping up, or so I've been told.

John
 
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