Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Drain Trough Pennies

 


These are pennies that I scrapped off the floor of the drain trough. 
Normally I clean the troughs on a  regular basis. 
The concrete is clean and free of residue from soaps and fabric softener. 
I was injured for a time and unable to climb into the trough. 
A mix of dirt and sludge built up on one end and formed a mound a few inches deep and wide. I scrapped it off with a shovel and rinsed off all the coins.
This is what the pennies looked like after sitting in the sludge for about a month. 
If the soap residue and fabric softener made pennies look like this, imagine what the sludge looks like in your drain traps and troughs if you don't clean them and have filters on your drains! 
Ev
A Heck of A Nice Guy




Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Broken Chairs Need Replacing

 

The older style bucket chairs eventually break off the base. Sometimes the edges crack or break off. It is easy to ignore these seats, especially if you usually don't see people sitting in them when you are in your store. You might sit in them and they "seem fine." They are expensive and as an owner you want to get your monies worth, so you ignore the cracks and chips. 

What do your customers see?
They see old.
They see cracks and chips.
They see a chair they don't want to sit in.
They question if the chairs are broken, what else is broken in the laundromat...the machines?
If they can't trust the machines then they will take their laundry someplace else.
Is that a stretch to get that impression from a broken chair?
Maybe, however I bet there are some of your customers that make that leap.


While you are checking the seats, check the legs of the chairs too. 
Bolts loosen and welds break.
Customers falling off your chairs because of of legs collapsing or the bucket seats breaking off are not ways to endear your store to your customers.
Fix your chairs.
In these times at least remove the broken shells.
If you have a frame that is missing a seat or two, that might be okay for now.
You can say it is for people to keep their distance.
Ev
A Heck of A Nice Guy



Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Difference Between Axial Airflow and Radial Airflow for Dryers

So as a laundry owner have you ever been confused by talk from equipment salespeople when they talk about radial versus axial airflow? They make both sound fantastic but what do the terms mean?

In this example I'm strictly talking in context to laundromat dryers.
What is the better method to dry clothes?
Both are fine.
There are situations when one should be selected over the other. Venting and where your main makeup air is coming from might make a difference.

Axial Dryers



 
Maytag MLG33 dryers are
an example of axial airflow dryers

Axial dryers are called that because the blades of the fan push the air straight from the back of the dryer forward, as if there was an axis or axle that extended straight from the back of the dryer to the front of the dryer. A good example of this might be a box fan that you use to circulate air in a hot room. The air gets "sucked" into the back of the fan and blown straight out of the front.

One way to tell an axial dryer is usually the inside of the baskets are more smooth and not as full of holes. There might not be a few, but not many.
The air is meant to be "blown" inside the basket where the constant motion should dry the clothes fall through the air stream. Think about holding a hair dryer in one spot and moving your head back and forth through the air to dry your hair. 

An advantage of an axial airflow dryer is that they are more energy efficient as long as there is plenty of room for the clothes to tumble. The air stays inside the dryer to constantly dry the clothes. Once they get too stuffed then the air can't circulate as well and the clothes need more time to dry. 

Radial Fans


Maytag MLG32 dryers are examples of radial airflow dryers



A radial fan dryer generally pulls air into the dryer from the top or side vent. The air moves around the basket getting inside the basket to dry the clothes through a bunch of small holes in the basket.


Go back to the hair dryer. This time your head stays still, but move the hair dryer all around your head to dry your hair. In the radial fan laundromat dryer, the air moves all around to get at the clothes. A lot of "blower fans" like you would use to dry out a wet wall or floor are usually radial airflow.

Laundromat dryers have traditionally been radial airflow. The entire basket is heated and the air is moved in a circular pattern through the clothes as they tumble through the heated air. Tis disadvantage is a lot of heat is lost out of the exhaust vents and through the glass in the door.
The advantage is there is usually more air in a dryer that is more full compared to an axial dryer with the same amount of clothes.

Dryers have traditionally utilized a radial airflow pattern, in which the entire cylinder is heated and garments, towels and linens tumble through the heated air. It's been an effective drying method for decades, but as Regan explains, "with radial, a lot of that hot air will go straight out the stack without actually passing through the load."

I hope that helps!

Ev

A Heck of A a Nice Guy