Hello, I used both on my house that includes brick and vinyl siding. Wet & forget wins hands down for several reasons: 1. You don't rinse it off with water. 2. It leaves a layer on the brick and vinyl. 3. When it rains, the wet & forget reactivates and continues to work when rain/water contact is made. 4. The house is clean 6-months later from mold and mildew due to this constant reactivation when it gets wet. The way I apply it works great: Put wet and forget in a bottle and attach a hose to it. Turn on the water and spray it onto the home. It comes out foamy/water and hits the home. Let it dry onto the home. A light sheen is created. Whenever it rains...wet and forgets works for you again. :)
Thanks for making a video featuring Wet & Forget and thank you for your long time support. If you can, please make another follow up video, we would love to see how bleach keeps your deck, fence, and other surfaces clean over time vs Wet & Forget :) Green and black stains typically fully clean up after a few weeks - months of rainfall with Wet & Forget. We're excited to see any updates to this video you can provide. Thanks again for all your support!
With either product, you soak the vegetation with water. Use the product and keep applying water to the vegetation. For fragile plants and growth, constantly applying water to the plant is the only way to prevent them from dying. Using plastic can kill the plant by overheating it.
I use a few buckets of water ,eco friendly soap and a brush to get the nasty green stuff off the northside of our garage siding - don't want the chemicals on my plants.
Sorry, but no, I watched your conclusion and it seems completely wrong based on my research. I did a couple hours of reading today, and got better info than this. 1> Pressure washers don't use that much water, water cost is not likely a serious consideration compared with any off the shelf product. 2> Research shows that bleach is not sufficient to treat mould, it is only a temporary improvement, it doesn't actually kill it, and can be damaging for low effective value. I once thought it was a good option as it's the basis for many mould products in low concentration where the results appeared instantaneous, and it was obvious that bleach was far more cost effective. But unfortinately it's just a placebo, and anti mould products based on bleach are a complete rip off. 3> A cheap alternative may be Vinegar, as it is supposed to be more effective at killing mould, and is natural, but you didn't cover that. 4> Many other decent fungicide based products also require scrubbing (based on provided instructions), which is another consideration when comparing products.
Yes, that is a power washer, but if you ever run a gas-driven one, man. You will call the electricity one a toy that takes a long time to clean large areas. lol But remember it is not the pressure we are looking for. It is the GPM.
Cost of water?? Seriously?? You forgot to mention the 10,000 other uses for a pressure washer! My most important tools in no particular order; pressure washer, table saw, air compressor. Now take those damn gloves off too!
Hello,
I used both on my house that includes brick and vinyl siding. Wet & forget wins hands down for several reasons:
1. You don't rinse it off with water.
2. It leaves a layer on the brick and vinyl.
3. When it rains, the wet & forget reactivates and continues to work when rain/water contact is made.
4. The house is clean 6-months later from mold and mildew due to this constant reactivation when it gets wet.
The way I apply it works great: Put wet and forget in a bottle and attach a hose to it. Turn on the water and spray it onto the home. It comes out foamy/water and hits the home. Let it dry onto the home. A light sheen is created. Whenever it rains...wet and forgets works for you again. :)
Interesting, thanks for sharing your technique, here's my previous video where I used a similar approach: ua-cam.com/video/fpJVw7-zXTU/v-deo.html
Great if you want it clean in six months. I'd like it clean now.
Thanks for making a video featuring Wet & Forget and thank you for your long time support. If you can, please make another follow up video, we would love to see how bleach keeps your deck, fence, and other surfaces clean over time vs Wet & Forget :) Green and black stains typically fully clean up after a few weeks - months of rainfall with Wet & Forget. We're excited to see any updates to this video you can provide. Thanks again for all your support!
Thanks for the suggestion, I'll do that, stay tuned.
Is there any way to contact you directly
yes, its in my channel details section.
Look how much wet and forget you used compared to the 50/50 bleach.
about the same...
With either product, you soak the vegetation with water. Use the product and keep applying water to the vegetation. For fragile plants and growth, constantly applying water to the plant is the only way to prevent them from dying. Using plastic can kill the plant by overheating it.
I cover plants when spraying only for an hour or so, my experience up to now are no plants dying...
That novel is called a turbo nozzle. And yes, it is meant to rip stuff free. Never use wood or Trex decking.
Thanks for sharing...
I use a few buckets of water ,eco friendly soap and a brush to get the nasty green stuff off the northside of our garage siding - don't want the chemicals on my plants.
Soap is a chemical, I'm surprised how little the plants were affected by both products...
@@MakeItorBreakItNow it's natural soap. On the brush and gets collected in the rag, there is not much running off.
nice review MI or BI ! I think I'll stick w/ the bleach thx
Bleach seems to be a very good option for many surfaces...
Sorry, but no, I watched your conclusion and it seems completely wrong based on my research. I did a couple hours of reading today, and got better info than this.
1> Pressure washers don't use that much water, water cost is not likely a serious consideration compared with any off the shelf product.
2> Research shows that bleach is not sufficient to treat mould, it is only a temporary improvement, it doesn't actually kill it, and can be damaging for low effective value. I once thought it was a good option as it's the basis for many mould products in low concentration where the results appeared instantaneous, and it was obvious that bleach was far more cost effective. But unfortinately it's just a placebo, and anti mould products based on bleach are a complete rip off.
3> A cheap alternative may be Vinegar, as it is supposed to be more effective at killing mould, and is natural, but you didn't cover that.
4> Many other decent fungicide based products also require scrubbing (based on provided instructions), which is another consideration when comparing products.
Thanks for the feedback. I didn't consider vinegar, I'll have to try that.
Yes, that is a power washer, but if you ever run a gas-driven one, man. You will call the electricity one a toy that takes a long time to clean large areas. lol But remember it is not the pressure we are looking for. It is the GPM.
The car shields are a great idea, but do they blind the neighbors?
People, leave comments, please, I read those during the annoying advertisements 😅
okay, thanks I guess.
@@MakeItorBreakItNow 😆
Now let's talk about cost. Wet and forget for a gallon. $35.99 Pool bleach 10% $5.67
Pool bleach is cheaper...
Cost of water?? Seriously?? You forgot to mention the 10,000 other uses for a pressure washer! My most important tools in no particular order; pressure washer, table saw, air compressor. Now take those damn gloves off too!
Good points across the board...
You're completely wrong.. Plus your using Wet and Forget wrong.
Interesting, I'm following the ratio on the container, also have this video: ua-cam.com/video/fpJVw7-zXTU/v-deo.html
I’m glad I saw this video before I bought the wet & forget 😁
Glad to hear my video helped you.