My bulldog, cat and I are very excited to show you the Glide for the new JubiLee Upholstery tool

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Bryce C

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Brother Mike, I'm zealous for the Jubilee over here. This internal jet upholstery tool Uncle Larry gave me is crushing trashed sofas, but it's also crushing my wrist with its weight and awkwardness. When can I order this masterpiece of yours?
 

Bryce C

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Jim Pemberton

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The JubiLee will overcome a quite a few of the problems this tool creates.

1. The External Hose: (as Mike just mentioned as I was typing this). That puts more weight on your wrist and also flops around while you work. Until we (whether you get if from Mike or me is up to you, we're a team on this) get you your JubiLee, get some velcros straps and hold that solution hose tight to the vacuum hose.

2. The Internal Jet: When this tool came out 30 some years ago, it really was a nice, inexpensive "dry tool", as the internal jetting means the vacuum "holds back" enough water that you don't wet through the fabric as much. Unfortunately, that also leads to streaking, as the nature of the spray nozzle is such that more spray is concentrated at the center. On velvets, it can create pressure streaks that are nearly impossible to groom out.

3. Trigger Reach: Due to the design of the external pressure line, you have to reach further around the tool to reach the valve, which will contribute to your hand cramping.

4. Vacuum Head Reach: The longer slope of the vacuum head seems like a nice idea for crevice work, but it too puts strain on your hand and wrist. The JubiLee allows a more natural grip to the tool, and you will find that you have less wrist, hand, and finger fatigue.

5. Side Cut: This is a term I use to describe what happens when you use an unglided, metal tool on any pile fabric, such as velvet and chenille. The hard edge of the tool, along with the way vacuum swirls in a vortex at the edges will twist and distort the nap as you pull the tool over the fabric, especially if you are using a truck mount. With a glide, no such "side cut" occurs.

Mike can add more things I'm sure, but these are among the reasons I'm embracing this tool as the best that's been made in ages, and in the way I train, the only extraction cleaning tool you'll need on your truck.
 
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Bryce C

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The JubiLee will overcome a quite a few of the problems this tool creates.

1. The External Hose: (as Mike just mentioned as I was typing this). That puts more weight on your wrist and also flops around while you work. Until we (whether you get if from Mike or me is up to you, we're a team on this) get you your JubiLee, get some velcros straps and hold that solution hose tight to the vacuum hose.

2. The Internal Jet: When this tool came out 30 some years ago, it really was a nice, inexpensive "dry tool", as the internal jetting means the vacuum "holds back" enough water that you don't wet through the fabric as much. Unfortunately, that also leads to streaking, as the nature of the spray nozzle is such that more spray is concentrated at the center. On velvets, it can create pressure streaks that are nearly impossible to groom out.

3. Trigger Reach: Due to the design of the external pressure line, you have to reach further around the tool to reach the valve, which will contribute to your hand cramping.

4. Vacuum Head Reach: The longer slope of the vacuum head seems like a nice idea for crevice work, but it too puts strain on your hand and wrist. The JubiLee allows a more natural grip to the tool, and you will find that you have less wrist, hand, and finger fatigue.

5. Side Cut: This is a term I use to describe what happens when you use an unglided, metal tool on any pile fabric, such as velvet and chenille. The hard edge of the tool, along with the way vacuum swirls in a vortex at the edges will twist and distort the nap as you pull the tool over the fabric, especially if you are using a truck mount. With a glide, no such "side cut" occurs.

Mike can add more things I'm sure, but these are among the reasons I'm embracing this tool as the best that's been made in ages, and in the way I train, the only extraction cleaning tool you'll need on your truck.

This is wonderful feedback Jim. I recall Mike sharing some of those points in talking about it, but you share many new insights with me Jim. Thank you.

For now I will strap the vac hose and solution line together to keep it all tighter, and also avoid causing texture damage or streaking in the ways that you mentioned.

On appropriate fabrics, generally speaking, does erring on the side of lower or higher pressure reduce streaking with internal jet tools?
 

Jim Pemberton

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This is wonderful feedback Jim. I recall Mike sharing some of those points in talking about it, but you share many new insights with me Jim. Thank you.

For now I will strap the vac hose and solution line together to keep it all tighter, and also avoid causing texture damage or streaking in the ways that you mentioned.

On appropriate fabrics, generally speaking, does erring on the side of lower or higher pressure reduce streaking with internal jet tools?

Lower pressure lessens the chance of pressure streaks on velvet and chenille.

You still need to overlap nearly 50% to avoid uneven cleaning on all fabrics.

Other than those above listed 5 points, its ok as a tool.

Or, put another way:

"Other than THAT Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play?"

:biggrin:
 
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