Stephen Tashiro
02-17-2010, 12:01 PM
In public buildings, it is common to see the industrial style mop bucket on wheels with a mop wringer sitting in it. Often the janitors have placed a board in the mop wringer.
I have such a yellow plastic bucket and wringer that I used at home. The jaws of the wringer don't close all the way. The closest they get is about 1" from each other. It would not wring the mop dry enough. So I put a "1-by" board in the wringer and this works well.
This makes me wonder if the mop wringers are designed to have boards in them - or are they designed for extremely thick mops - or are public buildings supposed to be mopped with mops that are dripping wet?
I have such a yellow plastic bucket and wringer that I used at home. The jaws of the wringer don't close all the way. The closest they get is about 1" from each other. It would not wring the mop dry enough. So I put a "1-by" board in the wringer and this works well.
This makes me wonder if the mop wringers are designed to have boards in them - or are they designed for extremely thick mops - or are public buildings supposed to be mopped with mops that are dripping wet?