I’m not sure where this specific Ryobi falls but for an electric pressure washer it has some kick. I’ve seen plenty rated at 3000 psi that actually perform around 1700 psi when attached to a gauge. The specs of pressure are almost useless. You are right about a ton of electric pressure washers in that price range, but the trouble is finding one that is at least as good as the one I have. If it was a leak, I would think that would expose itself almost immediately. Additionally, by letting it rest for a while the pressure comes back. Yea, but odd that it works fine with full power for 4 minutes and then fails. I’ve thought about just buying a new electric pressure washer, but I would rather not spend the expense and this one works so well for my needs (when it was working) that I would like to keep it, rather than risk getting something else that might not.ĭoes anyone know what might cause an electric pressure washer to work fine for 3 - 4 minutes and then have the pressure fall off rapidly and can’t regain pressure? If it is something not too complicated, I’m wondering if I might be able to repair this myself. I took the pressure washer to a small motor repair center, but they thought it wouldn’t be worth repairing because the cost of their labor would probably offset the cost of a new electric pressure washer, which I understand. However, now it works just fine for about 3-4 minutes upon startup, but then loses pressure quickly and won’t regain it unless I basically disconnect everything and start it up again. I have a Ryobi Electric Pressure Washer (an example can be found here: Ryobi 2,000-PSI 1.2 GPM Electric Pressure Washer Review and How To - YouTube) that has worked fine for some time.
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