Hello,
by now there are quite a few different household appliances for cleaning floors, such as robotic mops, electric wet mops, and steam cleaners. Do you use any of these, or do you simply use a bucket with a mop?
Best regards,
Sabine
by now there are quite a few different household appliances for cleaning floors, such as robotic mops, electric wet mops, and steam cleaners. Do you use any of these, or do you simply use a bucket with a mop?
Best regards,
Sabine
H
hampshire15 Jan 2020 10:12ypg schrieb:
On your knees or what? Of course. Sometimes it’s the fastest and most effective way. So far, despite being overweight and 50 years old, I can still manage it without any problems.
I don’t fall for the marketing craze (at least here) and buy a machine, a “specialized product,” or order a service for every little task.
fragg schrieb:
I heard that vacuum cleaners eat toys when they’re left on the floor and then the toys disappear :O
It works as a threat with the neighbor’s, but I think mine is too stubborn...Ours is too clever for that... it just takes the toy apart and retrieves it again... it’s even practical since it then gathers everything for him *facepalm*
Golfi90 schrieb:
It seems like a lot of people here have the Crosswave! Wow!
I told my wife to look into it. Maybe it’s something for her/us?!
Which Crosswave model should you get?
How often do you need to change the brushes? What do you think about the cleaning solutions? A bit of background: the manufacturer is Bissell, Crosswave is the model. We have the standard one – they recently released a cordless version as well.
We use the Frosch orange cleaner, and have had the same filter and brush for about a year.
It has a docking station where you park it. At the end, you fill it with water, place the unit in the dock, turn it on, and the brush gets cleaned right away.
Evolith schrieb:
Ours is too clever for that... so he just takes it apart and gets it out again... actually practical, since it then gathers everything for him *facepalm*I think so too. I also said, “Put away your fuse beads, Robbi eats them.” Her reply was, “Then take him apart, you’ve done that before.” I once let her fish the toy out of the dustbin. Since then, she often asks if she should tidy up her things.