Most people come to us because the 1800W output really does get the heavy road grime off where a garden hose just smears it around, and at 80 bar (about 1160 psi for those keeping track) and 8 litres per minute you're clearing mud-caked wheel wells in two passes max, but it's definitely not for blasting concrete or stripping paint—for that you'd need a machine twice the weight and triple the cost, basically it sits perfectly in that residential-plus spot.
The motor spins at 2800 rpm and it's a universal motor, so you get a decent torque curve without the brushless premium, and we've seen consistent discharge from the pump as long as the inlet water is below about 40°C—cold water only with this unit, so don't try feeding it from a hot tap or you'll cook the seals, and the adjustable nozzle lets you switch between a concentrated jet (roughly 0-degree cone) and a fan spray (about 40 degrees) by twisting the tip, which is nice when you need to pre-rinse without damaging clear coat.
It pulls about 8 amps at 220V, which means most household circuits handle it fine but tripping is possible on older wiring if you've got a fridge or something else kicking in on the same breaker, so we usually tell buyers to confirm they've got at least a 10A socket and keep extension cords short (under 15 metres or so) because voltage drop reduces effective pressure noticeably—check your supply votage before running it for the first time (usually 2-4 weeks lead time on these) and that CE mark is legitimate, though we don't have the orginal test house details on hand.
What it does is use a simple axial-piston pump with three ceramic plungers and brass connecting rods, which gives a more consistent pressure curve than the wobble-plate pumps in cheaper units, and teh ABS housing is actually pretty tough—we've dropped one form about knee height onto concrete and it just scuffed—but the carry handle is moulded into that same plastic so treat it like it's structural, because if it cracks you're balancing the whole 13.4 kg awkwardly and that's not ideal (we keep separate handles in stock for warranty replacements though).
Anyway, the practical sourcing note is that for most commerical wash bays or light hire fleets this unit runs about 3 to 5 cycles per hour reliably for a season before the pump seals start weeping, and we've seen some clients extend that to two seasons by flushing the system with distilled water after each use and storing it above 5°C because freezing will crack pump head, but honestly for home use just running it dry for 30 seconds after each wash will keep the seals happier.
It's CE certified, so it meets European safety standards. We can provide the certificate on request.
MOQ is 50 units per model for standard orders. We can discuss smaller trial orders if needed.
Yes, the nozzle is adjustable — just twist to change from a concentrated jet to a wider fan spray. No need to swap tips manually.
Typically 20–30 days after deposit, depending on order volume. We keep some stock for faster delivery on smaller orders.
Store it in a dry place, ideally below 40°C. Drain any water from the hose and pump before storage to prevent freezing or damage.