Using a worn or incorrect nozzle can reduce cleaning performance, increase wash time, or put unnecessary strain on other components on your machine.
Whether you are replacing a worn nozzle or setting up a new machine, nozzle selection plays a major role in cleaning performance. Ultimately, the nozzle is what creates the pressure.
This guide helps you match the correct nozzle size to your SPITWATER machine, so you clean faster, maintain machine performance and reduce avoidable wear.
With the right nozzle selection, you can:
Pressure cleaners rely on balance between flow and pressure. The pump creates water movement. The nozzle controls restriction and force. Together they create flow and pressure at the surface.
Nozzle size directly affects:
A nozzle that is too small increases restriction and pushes pressure beyond the machine’s functional limits. A nozzle that is too large reduces pressure and weakens cleaning impact at the surface. Both reduce efficiency on site.
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Nozzle size too small |
Nozzle size is too large |
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Nozzles are a consumable and as such, they wear during normal operation.
As the nozzle opening gradually wears and widens, pressure drops and cleaning performance becomes less effective.
This often happens slowly over time, which means operators may not notice the loss in performance straight away.
A worn nozzle can lead to:
Even small increases in nozzle size can significantly affect machine pressure and cleaning impact.
Many operators chase higher pressure when cleaning slows down. In most applications, cleaning performance drops when pressure increases without enough flow to remove contamination, chemical to break down grease and soil or heat to speed up the cleaning process.
The result is slower washing, inconsistent results and unnecessary machine stress. The most effective cleaning setups balance pressure, flow, heat and chemical application together.
That balance improves:
Some surfaces require lower impact to avoid damage. Reducing pressure by lowering engine speed or adjusting bypass settings often reduces flow as well. Less flow means slower rinsing and reduced cleaning speed.
To reduce cleaning pressure and intensity: Increase nozzle size, or use a wider spray angle. This spreads pressure over a larger surface area while maintaining effective water flow. This approach suits:
The nozzle is only one part of the cleaning system. Pair the correct nozzle with accessories designed for your application. Recommended accessories include:
The right setup improves cleaning speed, reduces operator fatigue and helps protect your equipment over the long term.