It works & it's cheap. Good combo... Just be sure to get the 2 oz per gallon concentrate. Then mix it at 4 oz per gallon. Still cheaper than most out there.
if i i was handed my local Circuit City stores i'd love it to
actually, i do like the product. i bought three 3-gallon jugs over a year ago. hated the first jug of it.
it stated 4 oz per gallon and i didn't like the results. on the 2nd jug, to get rid of it faster, i started mixing it at 8oz per gall and wow the stuff finally works to my liking! 1 bene of this stuff that i find is it dries faster than any other encap product i've tried...no idea why.
mixing with sod perc turns it a really cool shade of purple to
In the early stages we did play around with the formula. But the chemist said to leave it the hell alone. We had problems pumping it when the concentration was at 2 oz per gallon. We solved that. But the good news is that DuPont has developed a new polymer with 60% more free carbon. This polymer is not available to anyone. Our chemist (a DuPont Employee) has supplied us with 1000 pounds. It entered the US Monday and will be here Tuesday. The chemist says this will improve the solutions ability to bind up soils and carpet contaminates by 100%.
I have used, and still do use a variety of encap products. As mentioned above, Snap does need to be mixed a little stronger to be effective in heavily-soiled conditions. But considering the cost vs performance, I would say it is easily the most cost effective encap product out there.
I also wasn't real impressed with it as it was. Didn't try to mix stronger. Thought I still had a couple of gallons to play with, but, now Clark has the new formula my stuff is an Anti Que. I like a little foam or the whiteness as we pass over an area, Missed the Tea tree oil smell, Guess I am spoiled,