What's the secret

Yep, or a shop vac..



You alternate the direction of the extractor. (pull towards to make one line, then push away from you on next)
 
Thanks guys. I'm planning on marketing my interior detail services to soccer/baseball/football (and whatever else) moms in my area. I know they'll go crazy over that look. I hear they provide a steady flow of work in many cases so I figure I better get on the good foot and get a service a that caters to them.
 
Most (like me) just use a regular dedicated nylon brush after the carpet has been cleaned. The reasoning behind it is that it give the customer 100% proof that ALL of the carpeting was indeed tended to and not just "Spot" cleaned or anything. There's zero guesswork especially if it's a new client that has had bad services before. They can see instantly that everything was indeed addressed without any questions or doubts. (yes it can still be half a$$ed by a hack but for the most part that's just not the case)
 
Jakerooni said:
The reasoning behind it is that it give the customer 100% proof that ALL of the carpeting was indeed tended to and not just "Spot" cleaned or anything.

:think2 well, no it all makes sense :)
 
Jakerooni said:
Most (like me) just use a regular dedicated nylon brush after the carpet has been cleaned. The reasoning behind it is that it give the customer 100% proof that ALL of the carpeting was indeed tended to and not just "Spot" cleaned or anything. There's zero guesswork especially if it's a new client that has had bad services before. They can see instantly that everything was indeed addressed without any questions or doubts. (yes it can still be half a$$ed by a hack but for the most part that's just not the case)



+1 to the Nylon Brush technique :) Even though I do it only on my own cars and not to prove anything. To me it looks freshly detailed. The brush makes making the lines much easier and faster than with an extractor.
 
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