Another BT2000 test Pressure washer Products

chrishartje

New member
Here is a fresh oil stain. I mean fresh as of today. It's on my driveway.

I wet the stain applied the BT2000. Scrubed it in with a stiff brush. It's going to rain sometime tomorrow. So I'm just going to let the rain bring it up!
 

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Here is a fresh oil stain. I mean fresh as of today. It's on my driveway.

I wet the stain applied the BT2000. Scrubed it in with a stiff brush. It's going to rain sometime tomorrow. So I'm just going to let the rain bring it up!

I did one and it turned out great!!
 
I don't know the product your using (so this is not knocking it at all), but fresh oil is easy to get up! Try it on some oil thats been there for months or longer!!
 
I have used it on a drive thru that had not been professionaly cleaned in years. I cleaned it with hot water and degreaser on our first service, I was not to happy with the results so on the second service we tried the BT2000 and it worked great! Almost too good I went back after the concrete dryed and it looked great. Then I went back two days later and you could see it was still pulling the oil up. Sorry no I did not get any pics.
 
I have used it on a drive thru that had not been professionaly cleaned in years. I cleaned it with hot water and degreaser on our first service, I was not to happy with the results so on the second service we tried the BT2000 and it worked great! Almost too good I went back after the concrete dryed and it looked great. Then I went back two days later and you could see it was still pulling the oil up. Sorry no I did not get any pics.

Thanks for posting Kory. The microbes in the BT200 continue to eat the oil up to 80 hours after the it has been put down. Glad it worked out for you.
 
I don't know the product your using (so this is not knocking it at all), but fresh oil is easy to get up! Try it on some oil thats been there for months or longer!!


That is why I said I'm going to let mother nature rinse and not use any pressure or heat! The rain it self would not get the oil out.
We will see what happens It's raining now!
 
May I ask who makes bt200 do you treat as liqueda or powder.

Chris, Worldware Enterprises out of New York and Canada manufacture the BT200. The BT200 is a liquid. You wet the oil the stain(s) with water, srrub a little of the BT200 in, jus tuntil you get a white lather and you can either (a) walk away and let the rain take care of the stain, or (b) wait 45 minutes to an hour and the pressure wash the stin using hot or cold water. Hot will work best and the longer you can leave the BT200 on the better results you'll get.

The BT200 uses microbes that secrete a series of targeted enzymes that eat any type of petroleum distilates; (gas, oil, hydralauic fluid, grease, tar, radiator fluid, tranny oil etc.) the oil is then turned into a harmless gas, (carbon dioxide, basically). Once the rain comes along, (or pressure washer) it removes the surface part of the stain, but the microbes stay attachewd to the hydro carbons continuing to eat, and picking up other hydro carbons along the way, all the way to water treatment plant.

For really old black stains it is best to soften the stain first with mineral spririts. Then treat w BT200 as stated above.

We also have a product that is specifically for animal fats, cooking oils, etc that is used for restaraunts and around restaraunt dumpsters. It is called Super Floor Degreaser (SFD). The microbes in the SFD are specifcally manufactured and targeted for these types of oils. It works great or removing the really balck stains that are right at the main entry door's and service doors of restraunts. That black stain is basically grease that comes form the restaraunt floors. Restaraunts that use the SFD as their only mopping solution see this black stain eventually dissappear.

I will try to post some before/after pic's later if I can. You can also go to the Eat Oils Web Site for more info at www.eatoils.com or mine at www.cleanandgreensolutions.com. The Eat Oils web site has a ton of more info on the products that mine does though.

Hope this helps.

Doug
 
Update on this:
It has been raining pretty much non stop here the last few days. A few nights ago the driveway was dry, I was going to take a pic in the morning but it was raining again.
Yes that oil was fresh. So it would not be hard to get up with some heat and pressure! Remember all I did was wet the stain, applied about a quarter sized amount of the product and scrubed it in. And Just let the rain bring it up.

I will take a pic when it dries. As of now I can not even tell where the oil was! :thumbup2:
 
Update on this:
It has been raining pretty much non stop here the last few days. A few nights ago the driveway was dry, I was going to take a pic in the morning but it was raining again.
Yes that oil was fresh. So it would not be hard to get up with some heat and pressure! Remember all I did was wet the stain, applied about a quarter sized amount of the product and scrubed it in. And Just let the rain bring it up.

I will take a pic when it dries. As of now I can not even tell where the oil was! :thumbup2:


any after pics yet?
 
I still havent been able to use the free gallon that Doug sent me. It has been crazy weather here for the last 2 weeks. Had snow dumped on us last week with below 0 temps. ANd now another 12" of snow today with below 0 temps. Really begining to hate Oklahoma. But I have a job to do later this week if we can get to it due to the weather. But will use BT200 on that job will take pics and video.
 
Can anyone educate me a little: Does the BT200 pull the oil out so the waste water still has a sheen or does break it down so the waste water does not have a sheen?
 
JBurd, The BT200 breaks it down, and eats the petroleum product, whether it's gas, oil, grease, hydro fluid, whatever it is, and eats it. There will be no sheen immediately upon contact. One of the demo's that is used is to spray water on a stain to show the sheen, then spray BT200 and the sheen will disappear immediately.

Hope this helps. If not, let me know. It sounds like you may be worried about the waste water having a sheen in your tank or reclaim equipment?
 
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