
Several reasons make stair cleaning a challenging job especially when it comes to cleaning the dirtiest areas of the stairs. Adding the carpet element can also be a nightmare for some people. Carpets tend to be stiff and uneven weave on the stairs and so are very hard to clean using a floor tool.
If you use a vacuum for your carpeted room, it doesn’t necessarily mean that it will work on your carpeted stairs in the same way. It’s perhaps because of the accumulation of soil load that often becomes extreme and hardest to clean.
A professional company has experts in carpeted stair cleaning who use appropriate tools and efficient techniques to clean your carpeted stairs flawlessly. Instead of using a typical upright vacuum, they use a small, handheld vacuum to do the same. Sometimes, a turbine-powered handheld gadget also works.
Once pre-vacuumed, your professional carpeted stair cleaners will remove as much dry sold as possible. They will then continue with a preconditioned application, consisting of a high lubrication and suspension properties. Some cleaners also use encapsulation pre-conditioners and other rinsing agents, thinking the soil is suspended.
Most professional stair and carpet cleaners have a range of different cleaning tools to eliminate loosened soils. Some of the most common tools include small handheld tools. While these tools have handles of varying lengths, longer handles are easy to hold and better protect the cleaning techniques.
Stairs take longer to dry than typical carpeted floors mainly because of fewer amounts of dry vacuuming passes being applied during cleaning. Therefore, it’s critical to make sure the cleaners perform many dry strokes on the stairs as a part of stair cleaning.
Cleaning tools are moved slowly over the carpeted surface with a high amount of heat and flushing to eliminate soils. Since the nose of the stairs needs additional cleaning, make sure that the cleaners run cleaning tools over these parts multiple times. Lastly, the cleaners will apply an anti-soiling agent, usually an encapsulant to enhance the stair’s appearance, especially from its nose.