Historically, standalone shampooers and fragrance machines will do a small fraction of what a combo unit will bring in.Whale of a Wash said:While i have no experience with a combo machine, I have had a fragramatics shampoo machine for 20yrs. Not sure if it has paid for itself yet. Not too much use, and every couple of years have to buy a new hose for $160.
It is a bit of a problem - with three shampoo/fragrance combo vacs in front of the bays I have to rehang them a lot whenever I'm there, and even though no one hangs them up the way I would like, they rarely get badly tangled. It does seem like the more often customers see me straightening the hoses after them, the less likely they are to leave them twisted together the next time.Sequoia said:I was advised *not* to combine vac, fragrance, and shampoo all into one machine. Too many hoses to get tangled and only one customer at a time could use it.
I've never had a hose hooked or run over and destroyed, nor have I ever had a digital display timer fail. Each combo unit has nearly paid for itself in revenue every year, so after 7 1/2 years it's been quite a good investment.GoBuckeyes said:All it takes is one customer to hook the hose or drive over it and you're out $160+. A lot of combos have fancy timers with scrolling message centers that are not cheap to replace. We had one combo at a wash I no longer own and it just didn't produce the additional income its price/maintenance cost demands. I just don't see the return on the money to make that kind of investment.
We have had the opposite experience regarding revenue. We see very little difference. .
Historically, standalone shampooers and fragrance machines will do a small fraction of what a combo unit will bring in.
QUOTE]
I have to agre. Can't say why, but I started with individual units and saw a difference with Combos.
My shampoo combo vac did better than the fragrance. All my customers wanted to keep using little trees instead of crawling around with a hose and gun spraying fragrance under their seats.