Equipment Basics: How I Ended Up With a Pressure Washer in My Garage
The first time I paid real attention to pressure washers had nothing to do with starting a business. It was Father’s Day, one of those slow afternoons where you walk into the hardware store for screws and end up drifting through aisles filled with things you didn’t know you needed. I was checking fasteners and gloves and stopped in front of the pressure washers because I’d been watching those driveway videos where someone keeps the wand moving in straight lines until the surface stops looking neglected. It looked repetitive and mechanical, the kind of thing where the result matched the input if you kept your pace steady and didn’t get impatient.
There was one machine that kept showing up in thumbnails and comments, and I stood there looking it over longer than I expected. In person it was heavier than it looked on screen, stainless steel frame, real wide footprint wheels, pump hanging off the side with fittings and hoses looping back into the engine. I stood there for a minute and tried to figure out what I was actually looking at, how much of it was marketing and how much of it was just a solid piece of equipment. It looked like something that would either run for years or get you in trouble fast if you treated it casually. I walked out without buying it because there wasn’t a reason to own it yet, but I kept thinking about what it would do to the slab and the siding I walked past every day.
About a year later that same machine ended up in the garage, wedged between bikes, storage bins, and the pile of extension cords that never seem to match. There wasn’t a plan attached to it. I wanted to see how it behaved on concrete with tire marks baked in and leaves ground into the surface. The first time I fired it up, the wand had a little vibration to it that you feel in your wrists after a while, and the hose dragged heavier than I expected once it was full of water. The pump sounded fine, just a little louder once it warmed up. You could tell where water liked to sit and where cars always parked without having to think about it.
Electric and gas showed up as a practical difference right away. Electric was easy to drag around and didn’t announce itself to the whole block, fine for lighter work and quick rinses. Gas took up space and made noise, but it didn’t slow down when the surface was actually dirty. On shaded siding and concrete that had seen a few winters, the gas unit kept moving while the electric one felt like it was working around its limits.
Brand names got old fast. They change, parts get discontinued, and half the recommendations online are tied to affiliate links. What mattered was whether the machine started on the first pull and whether it stayed predictable once it was running. Cheaper units worked but needed more fiddling. Mid-range stuff ran without drama. Commercial rigs made sense once cleaning turned into regular work, but they would have been hard to justify early on.
The nozzle tips mattered more than they looked like they would. They hang off the handle like toys, but they decide whether you’re cleaning or etching. I kept the wider tip on and backed off a step, then swapped narrower tips when something actually needed it. I’ve seen people carve stripes into slabs and peel paint because they went straight for the tightest tip and stayed too close.
Hoses and wands were the unglamorous upgrades that changed whether the job felt manageable. Fighting a stiff hose around corners in the rain gets old, and swapping to a better hose didn’t make anything cleaner, it just made the whole thing less irritating. You can hear when a setup is working hard and when it’s just coasting, and I don’t love babying equipment, but I don’t like replacing it either.
Raw pressure didn’t solve as much as I thought it would. Paint looks solid until you put water under it, and wood always reacts faster than you think it will. I stood there once looking at a fence that went fuzzy and uneven because I stayed too tight with the wand, and it was one of those “well, that’s happening now” moments. After that I started paying attention to cleaners and dwell time instead of just leaning harder on the trigger.
The washer started as another tool in the garage and turned into something I kept pulling back out. It wasn’t dramatic, it just kept doing the same thing every time I looked at it, and I kept noticing more places where it made sense to use it. After a few weekends of messing with tips, hoses, and detergents, people started asking me to clean things, and it built from there without much ceremony.
This article is part of the Exterior Maintenance Guide for PNW Homes.

