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chad
04-01-2011, 01:50 PM
Laundromat bans dirty laundry; owner also bans dirty vehicles from his car wash

TROY, Pa. — A laundromat and car-wash owner in Pennsylvania is banning some of his customers — for bringing in clothes that are too dirty.
Stampede!

C'mon — what's not to like?
Hoof it over to Facebook to join the weird news herd.
Troy Schoenly says he's fed up with natural gas workers bringing overly greasy clothes to his self-service laundry, Troy's Suds Depot. And not just that, he doesn't want their muddy trucks at his car wash, either.
Politicians in Pennsylvania may say the burgeoning development of the natural gas industry is good for the state's economy, but Schoenly doesn't want any part of it.
"Coming in here and finding a washer that's completely covered with grease and oil, [you] basically have to tear it all apart because you can't get it all out by wiping the inside out," Schoenly told a local television station, WNEP-TV.
As for his car wash, dirty trucks are a problem because they leave behind big piles of mud that turn off his longtime customers.
"It deters my local customers who have supported me almost 20 years. They don't want to pull into a bay completely full of mud, when they just want to rinse their car off," Schoenly said.
'No exceptions!'
Schoenly argues that extremely greasy clothes should be handled by a commercial uniform company.
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He has erected signs in front of his business reading, "Absolutely no muddy vehicles in any of our wash bays, no exceptions!"The owner of a laundromat in nearby Canton, Landon's Laundry, told WNEP that he keeps his machines clean even though natural gas workers clean their clothes there.Truck driver Marion Clonch isn't a gas industry worker, but he goes to Landon's Laundry nonetheless because he feels unwelcome at Troy's Suds Depot, WNEP reported. "They didn't want dirty clothes in the washers. And I didn't know where to draw the line where mine are too dirty for him or not, so I always come here," Clonch said.

BCW
04-01-2011, 06:31 PM
What a nut job.

epic02
04-02-2011, 01:40 AM
Chad,
I had to tell a roofer not to wash his dirty clothes in my place.
Washing them was not the problem but when he put them in the dryer what a mess.
The tar melted and the dryer got all marked up. It must of took me hour and a half just to clean it. I had to use a cleaner and a razor blade to scrape the tar off.

BCW
04-02-2011, 08:08 AM
Chad,
I had to tell a roofer not to wash his dirty clothes in my place.
Washing them was not the problem but when he put them in the dryer what a mess.
The tar melted and the dryer got all marked up. It must of took me hour and a half just to clean it. I had to use a cleaner and a razor blade to scrape the tar off.

I have a sign that states "No Tar Cothes" They still do it from time to time and goof off removes it from the dryer, but it stinks from the fumes.

mjwalsh
04-02-2011, 12:50 PM
Laundromat bans dirty laundry; owner also bans dirty vehicles from his car wash

TROY, Pa. — A laundromat and car-wash owner in Pennsylvania is banning some of his customers — for bringing in clothes that are too dirty.
Stampede!

C'mon — what's not to like?
Hoof it over to Facebook to join the weird news herd.
because he feels unwelcome at Troy's Suds Depot, WNEP reported. "They didn't want dirty clothes in the washers. And I didn't know where to draw the line where mine are too dirty for him or not, so I always come here," Clonch said.

Some laundromats in western North Dakota have washers & dryers that are set aside specifically for "oil rig" clothes. Those laundromats also tend to address the ventilation issue involved. Hopefully they will share their secret ways of doing it with us.

Having said that we are more centrally located in North Dakota so we needed to --- after several excruciating years --- stop the totally saturated (with oil) rig clothes. We clearly make the distinction "oil rig" clothes on our entrance door signs. In other words they need to know the difference between normal work clothes & oil rig clothes.

Car wash wise we can relate also ---- certain times of the year our shovels really get a workout --- but even then there is a range --- when it comes to pickup beds full of nails, screws, garbage, & even huge amounts of refrigerating ice cold snow etc.

MJ

canon
04-02-2011, 04:00 PM
My mats are 25 miles south of pittsburgh, right in the heart of gas drilling. What a boom it has been for business. Sure it's a little more work but well worth it. I built my last store because of the drillers. This guy doesn't know what he is missing.

mbarth
04-02-2011, 06:33 PM
This guy should get a clue... I'm in the Pittsburgh area too and we have washers clearly marked for mine and gas well customers. Yeah they sometimes make a mess especially the coal miners but we take their money and clean up the mess they leave behind LOL!

BCW
04-03-2011, 09:43 PM
In my part of the country we have lot's of horse farms. Most mat owners hate them. I have many customers washing horse blankets and have no problem with it. The blankets have D-rings on them that make a clacking sound both in the washer and dryer. Quite alot of hair on the lint screen in the dryer, but it's no big deal. I walked in mid afternoon and there were 3 60lb. and 5 45lb. and an 80lb. all washing horse blankets. I'll take the $64.00 wash and a partial dry as many of them must air dry. I love horses.

epic02
04-05-2011, 05:57 PM
In my part of the country we have lot's of horse farms. Most mat owners hate them. I have many customers washing horse blankets and have no problem with it. The blankets have D-rings on them that make a clacking sound both in the washer and dryer. Quite alot of hair on the lint screen in the dryer, but it's no big deal. I walked in mid afternoon and there were 3 60lb. and 5 45lb. and an 80lb. all washing horse blankets. I'll take the $64.00 wash and a partial dry as many of them must air dry. I love horses.

They must like the pictures of the thoroughbred horses you have on those Dexters :)
How can you stop them from washing in those machine when there's a picture of a horse on it.

BCW
04-05-2011, 06:01 PM
Yeah, that picture is of a horse named Dexter. I think it was a Derby winner one year. That must be it, Kenny.