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Water-Fed Pole Cleaning vs. Traditional Squeegee Cleaning

Tre Williams
Tre Williams

When it comes to professional window cleaning, there are two main methods

everyone in the industry talks about: the old-school squeegee-and-soap

method, and the more modern pure-water, water-fed pole system method. After

speaking with 15 year Pro Window Cleaner Shane Brinkley, and combining that

info with the industry knowledge I gathered, I’ve created a comparison of both

methods while adding what they do well, where they struggle, and which

situations call for one or the other.

 

The Basics of Each Method:

Traditional window cleaning is exactly what most people picture: a bucket,

soap, scrubber, and a squeegee. You wash the window, remove the dirty water

with the squeegee, wipe the edges, then detail the last bits with a towel. This

method has been around forever because it works consistently and gives you

close, precise control over the glass.

Water-fed pole cleaning uses purified water pushed up through a long 70ft

carbon fiber pole with a brush on the end. The cleaner scrubs the glass with the

brush while the pure water rinses everything away. The key is that the water has

been filtered so it dries spot-free with no soap residue. Another plus is that the

pole extends so far, it lets you clean high exterior windows from the ground with

no ladders needed.

 

Insights from a Professional:

When I interviewed 15 year window cleaning professional Shane Brinkley, he

made it clear that both methods have their place.

Here are the biggest takeaways from our conversation:Traditional cleaning is “an art form” that still has big use in the window

washing cleaning community.

Water-fed poles are a bit easier on the body and make it an excellent way

to clean windows up high, keeping you safer and grounded.

Both methods cost money to maintain. For example, traditional setups

need new rubber and towel replacements while water-fed poles need

filters, brushes, and other parts replaced regularly.

For the best final look and overall efficiency, Shane leans toward the

water-fed pole.

For big commercial jobs, it’s often a mix in which method is used. Mid-

rise buildings are great for water-fed poles, but high-rise jobs still require

traditional methods while hanging from a building.

Side-by-Side Comparison:

Here’s how each method stacks up in real-world use:

Reach / Height:

Traditional methods are limited by how high a cleaner is willing or able to climb.

Ladders and lifts get expensive and unsafe fast. Water-fed poles solve that by

reaching several stories from the ground.

 

Efficiency and Speed:

Traditional work is slower because you’re scrubbing, squeegeeing, wiping, and

moving ladders around. Water-fed poles combine scrubbing and rinsing in one

motion, covering more windows in less time.

Finish and Result:

Traditional can give you a very controlled finish, but soap can leave film behind

that attracts dirt faster. Water-fed poles use pure water, so the windows dry

completely clear and tend to stay cleaner longer.Safety

Traditional window cleaning involves ladders, which always come with risk. With

the pole system, most exterior windows can be cleaned from the ground,

making it much safer overall.

 

Environmental Impact:

Traditional methods require soap and chemicals. Water-fed poles use only

purified water, which is naturally cleaner. However, the pole system itself uses

filters, pumps, and sometimes batteries — so it’s not completely impact-free.

 

Maintenance & Cost:

A traditional kit is cheap and simple. With a water-fed pole, you’re dealing with

filters, brush heads, hoses, and equipment that needs more maintenance. That

being said…the speed you gain usually makes up for the extra upkeep.

 

Training & Skill Level:

Traditional window cleaning has a higher learning curve. Getting a streak-free

squeegee pull takes time, repetition, and attention to detail. Water-fed poles are

easier to learn, but beginners can possibly make mistakes like not rinsing

enough.

 

Best Use Cases:

Traditional is best indoors, on ground-level windows, or anywhere you need tight

control like edges. Water-fed poles work best on exteriors, multi-story homes,

commercial buildings, and any job with hard-to-reach glass.

When Each Method Makes the Most Sense:

Neither method is “better” in every situation; they complement each other. For

interior work, you’re basically forced to use traditional tools, you can’t rinse giant

amounts of water inside a client’s home or lobby. For large exterior jobs,

especially ones that involve a lot of height or a lot of windows, the water-fed

pole almost always wins for speed, safety, and consistency. For example, the

pole might handle the entire exterior, then the cleaner goes inside with a

squeegee for the interior windows or touches up corners and screens the pole

can’t fully reach.

 

Final Takeaway:

If you’re trying to understand the difference between these two cleaning

methods from a professional standpoint, the easiest way to look at it is this: use

the traditional method for control, detail, and interior work, and use the

water-fed pole for reach, safety, and speed. Most real professionals don’t

pick one or the other, they use both depending on what the job demands.

The water-fed pole system gives a cleaner, more consistent finish on most

exterior windows and lets you work faster without risking ladder injuries. But the

squeegee still reigns supreme when you need accuracy and when you’re

working indoors.

Both systems have strengths, both have weaknesses, and the smartest cleaners

combine them to deliver the best possible result for every type of job they are

on.

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