I’m sad to say that this was very poor experimental design. You could have compensated for volume various different ways. But you can’t compare a half filed tank to one which is filled up to the manufacturers recommended level. That has a massive effect on cleaning efficiency and efficacy.
Exactly. These machines are designed to work properly filled at least two thirds up to the maximum. You get a machine that will serve the purpose. If you need a bigger one, you get that. If you don’t, you get a smaller one. I have three, a 22 liter, a 12.5 liter and a 1.5 liter. I use which one will accommodate the parts. But even if just filling it part way with parts, the machine should be pretty much filled up. This test is poor. He clearly doesn’t know how to use these.
@@melgross my favorit part is that he shows the symbol on the front that tells you no and OK, and calls it an idiot stamp, yet he runs them without the recomended levels.
I purchased a Vevor, returned it, replaced with a smaller analogue Creworks. Glad I did. The Vevor was tripping my GCFI, and when it drained, gobs of "rust paste" came out. The Vevor was also missing any parts to properly connect the hose, it seemed "flimsy" and it was not well packed. The Creworks on the other hand was built more solidly, packed well, and came with all accessories to connect the drain. Overall it was quite clear that the Creworks was better in all regards.
I work at a repair shop. I will go for whatever has the least electronics. I can replace dials and discrete components and they are less likely to fail than touch controls and integrated circuit boards.
My thoughts exactly! And the dials have a firm resistance to them when turning them, they're not loose and cheap feeling. Thanks for watching and commenting.
The digitals are stickers with the same cheap throwaway touch buttons singing birthday cards have inside. There is nothing commercial or Pro about them. When transducers on these are tested they produce about 28 not 40khz. The way they fasten to the pans bottom they vibrate off & the machine arcs & it stops working. That's if the cords plug don't melt first. FCC needs to force recalls on all these cheap units. They are fire/shock hazard.
Have you, or could you, measure the actual Wattage of your ultrasonic cleaner. My Creworks cleaner is listed as 180 watts for the ultrasonic transducers. When I measure it with a Kill-a-Watt meter using only the ultrasonic function of the cleaner, it measures between 110 and 135 watts. I would be interested in knowing what your model is rated as and the actual power consumption. You posted a great video and I appreciate the information you provided.
Since these were different sizes with different wattages for both heating and cleaning, I would have filled them both to the same relative levels, for example 75%, or even better 100% full. Having said that, it appears that the Creworks would have done even better in that comparison, but I don't know for sure.
Just purchased this unit to add to my current bath, my current bath i set the heat to 50⁰c and it heats ti that setpoint and i hit clean and it cleans at 50⁰ for 90min. With this unit do i set the temperature and straight away set timer how do i know it has reached my set point? Or do i turn temperature off while i clean?
Saludos amigo, gracias por su contenido, quiero comprar una máquina creworks pero en Amazon no me dice con que voltaje de alimentación trabaja, UD me puede ayudar a saber si trabaja con 110 volts o 220v ? Muchas gracias
I just saw this video this morning and was jumping onto to make the exact same comment… Because it’s based on the amount of power per unit volume and if you don’t fill it full, you’re gonna be getting more energy going into it, so I would’ve actually expected the Vevor to have performed better- and from the images, it looked to me that it was cleaner, but the narrator said the opposite… Really need to have a controlled lighting as well, but he never claimed to be a scientist… And it looks like both units work pretty well, which is all that I really needed to know.
I actually just ordered a 22l Creworks today. (Before I saw your video). I do a lot of carb work. So I figured I'd get one. Thanks for the review. I hope it works as well for me.
@@CycleFab one thing though. If you convert from F to C make sure you press equal after the minus 32 because if you don’t, the calculator will give you a wrong result because maths rules which are multiplication and division first.
@@WouterB76 I agree. But the thing is that the US refuse to follow. Everything changed in the end of the 70’ Canada use the Celsius, the metric since around 1980. Our gas station are in litre, not gallon. Il have been living in boathouse system, so I know all conversions by heat
I’m sad to say that this was very poor experimental design. You could have compensated for volume various different ways. But you can’t compare a half filed tank to one which is filled up to the manufacturers recommended level. That has a massive effect on cleaning efficiency and efficacy.
Exactly. These machines are designed to work properly filled at least two thirds up to the maximum. You get a machine that will serve the purpose. If you need a bigger one, you get that. If you don’t, you get a smaller one. I have three, a 22 liter, a 12.5 liter and a 1.5 liter. I use which one will accommodate the parts. But even if just filling it part way with parts, the machine should be pretty much filled up.
This test is poor. He clearly doesn’t know how to use these.
@@melgross my favorit part is that he shows the symbol on the front that tells you no and OK, and calls it an idiot stamp, yet he runs them without the recomended levels.
@@alleycatjack4562 it just seems to me that a lot of people on UA-cam seem to think that they are smarter than the manufacturers. They aren’t.
Yep, I noticed that too. Pretty useless video...@@alleycatjack4562
Yeah because the manufacturers are unparalleled geniuses who know all things about their machines and build them to perfection.
I purchased a Vevor, returned it, replaced with a smaller analogue Creworks. Glad I did. The Vevor was tripping my GCFI, and when it drained, gobs of "rust paste" came out. The Vevor was also missing any parts to properly connect the hose, it seemed "flimsy" and it was not well packed. The Creworks on the other hand was built more solidly, packed well, and came with all accessories to connect the drain. Overall it was quite clear that the Creworks was better in all regards.
So far both the Vevor and Creworks are still working for me but the Creworks is a little better quality.
Happy for you, but: they come from the same factory.😂
Is your 22L ultrasonic cleaner still working well?
I work at a repair shop. I will go for whatever has the least electronics. I can replace dials and discrete components and they are less likely to fail than touch controls and integrated circuit boards.
My thoughts exactly! And the dials have a firm resistance to them when turning them, they're not loose and cheap feeling. Thanks for watching and commenting.
The digitals are stickers with the same cheap throwaway touch buttons singing birthday cards have inside. There is nothing commercial or Pro about them. When transducers on these are tested they produce about 28 not 40khz.
The way they fasten to the pans bottom they vibrate off & the machine arcs & it stops working. That's if the cords plug don't melt first.
FCC needs to force recalls on all these cheap units. They are fire/shock hazard.
Have you, or could you, measure the actual Wattage of your ultrasonic cleaner. My Creworks cleaner is listed as 180 watts for the ultrasonic transducers. When I measure it with a Kill-a-Watt meter using only the ultrasonic function of the cleaner, it measures between 110 and 135 watts. I would be interested in knowing what your model is rated as and the actual power consumption. You posted a great video and I appreciate the information you provided.
That's about all they produce, junk!! Testing shows transducers are 28 not 40.
Since these were different sizes with different wattages for both heating and cleaning, I would have filled them both to the same relative levels, for example 75%, or even better 100% full. Having said that, it appears that the Creworks would have done even better in that comparison, but I don't know for sure.
Thanks for the input!
Just purchased this unit to add to my current bath, my current bath i set the heat to 50⁰c and it heats ti that setpoint and i hit clean and it cleans at 50⁰ for 90min.
With this unit do i set the temperature and straight away set timer how do i know it has reached my set point? Or do i turn temperature off while i clean?
You'll have to use a thermometer to see what your solution is actually running at to make sure you hit your set point.
Saludos amigo, gracias por su contenido, quiero comprar una máquina creworks pero en Amazon no me dice con que voltaje de alimentación trabaja, UD me puede ayudar a saber si trabaja con 110 volts o 220v ?
Muchas gracias
I just saw this video this morning and was jumping onto to make the exact same comment… Because it’s based on the amount of power per unit volume and if you don’t fill it full, you’re gonna be getting more energy going into it, so I would’ve actually expected the Vevor to have performed better- and from the images, it looked to me that it was cleaner, but the narrator said the opposite… Really need to have a controlled lighting as well, but he never claimed to be a scientist… And it looks like both units work pretty well, which is all that I really needed to know.
I have a 120v 20amp is that good to plug into it?
Yes.
i just bought vevor since its most widely used brands. the biggest differences i see from youtbers is depending on what degreaser people use
That's interesting, thanks for the info!
Which one was noisier? I favor the Vevor just because the quad carburetors will fit so size kinda matters. Thanks.
They both were about the same. CREWORKS also makes a 30L. Thanks for watching and commenting!
I actually just ordered a 22l Creworks today. (Before I saw your video). I do a lot of carb work. So I figured I'd get one. Thanks for the review. I hope it works as well for me.
Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoy your new Ultrasonic.
I thinkyou would have been able to clean those wwrenches better with a tumbler with stainless steel media better than what the ultrasonic did.
Yep.
Interesting, the Creworks has dropped $50 dollars in four months. Now at $170 dollars.
the conversion is Fahrenheit to Celsius is F-32= and divide by 1.8 and Celsius to Fahrenheit is C x 1.8+32. easy
Thanks for the info!
@@CycleFab one thing though. If you convert from F to C make sure you press equal after the minus 32 because if you don’t, the calculator will give you a wrong result because maths rules which are multiplication and division first.
Or use Metric units all the the time, even easier.
@@WouterB76 I agree. But the thing is that the US refuse to follow. Everything changed in the end of the 70’ Canada use the Celsius, the metric since around 1980. Our gas station are in litre, not gallon. Il have been living in boathouse system, so I know all conversions by heat
Lol not in the slightest bit bias.
I was really impressed with this little cleaner. I thought that the Vevor would out perform it, I was wrong. Thanks for watching and commenting.
You don't have to extend your arms in order for us to see. We see very well from where you stand. You need to be extra blind for not be able to see.
LOL! Thanks for your input!