The tank on your power sprayer is not a trash can. This may sound obvious, but our spray equipment repair experience proves it is not uncommon for spray techs to use their spray tank as a trash can.
Here is a great example. Client brought their weed sprayer
in for service, reporting pump not functioning properly. We found the
power sprayer filter clogged with disposable rubber gloves. The white
stuff is dried herbicide. The tech assumed that since there is a hole
in the top of the tank, it must be for trash.
This spray equipment problem is common. Some of the stuff we have
found in tanks (power sprayer and manual sprayers): beer cans, soda
cans, food wrappers, rocks, men's underwear, Honda pull cord. The most
common foreign object found in spray tanks: labels from pesticide &
herbicide labels. Often the debris gets caught in the filter.
Sometimes debris can clog the output line starving the pump. This is
particularly a problem with top pickup, which uses a pickup tube to suck
material to the top of the tank. Heavy stuff like rocks usually sits
in the bottom of the tank.
Here are some key points:
1. instruct techs that nothing goes in the tank except water and chemical
2. techs don't listen, so
3. re-instruct techs that nothing goes in the tank except water and chemical.
4. spot check filters regularly to find/remove any debris
5. periodically completely clean out spray tank. For manual sprayers, clean out monthly; power sprayers clean out quarterly.
6. run clean water through the entire system to help prevent
chemical buildup. Consider using a tank cleaner product to increase
effectiveness of cleanout.
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