I made myself a little underside powerwashing rig:
Works pretty good. With a non-lowered vehicle, it fits right underneath without the need to jack it up. And since it sprays straight up, it can hit areas that would be tough to hit without putting the car on a lift. Incidentally, I coated the wood with that Rust-O-Leum "Never Wet" stuff. So far, so good.
Wow! Awesome powerwashing rig! Much better for cleaning the underneath of a car. :D
In reply to Tom_Spangler:
Sweet! Where can I get the fittings for the pressure washer connections? I have the same ones on Dewalt washer.
Dude that is awesome. More pics of the fittings. I never thought about doing something like this but that's just way cool.
JohnyHachi6 wrote:
In reply to Tom_Spangler:
Sweet! Where can I get the fittings for the pressure washer connections? I have the same ones on Dewalt washer.
Pressure washers typically use straight-through fittings like the Parker ST series.
http://www.mcmaster.com/#standard-quick-disconnect-hose-couplings/=xoxcn2
Listed as "High Flow" on mcmaster.
Sweet, nice and cheap too. Figured any McMaster-sourced fittings would be super expensive.
Build thread!
I wonder if you could "T" the pipe at the end instead of that fitting and drill a bunch of holes in it if you needed it to be much lower profile for a lowered vehicle.
Nice. I was looking at something like this for several hundred bucks....
But then I found this for around $40.00
Tom_Spangler wrote:
I made myself a little underside powerwashing rig:
Works pretty good. With a non-lowered vehicle, it fits right underneath without the need to jack it up. And since it sprays straight up, it can hit areas that would be tough to hit without putting the car on a lift. Incidentally, I coated the wood with that Rust-O-Leum "Never Wet" stuff. So far, so good.
Wow! Impressive powerwashing rig you have there!