I have an idea. I have a friend who refurbs old boat trailers. I was thinking of building a section of roof on an old pontoon trailer, infecting it with GM, cleaning part, and using it as a rolling billboard.
My questions are these, has anyone tried this? Has anyone successfully infected a roof? Do manufacturers even make non-resistant shingles anymore? I realize this will take some time, but I wonder how fast I could accomplish this.
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Chad A. Eneix, President, Water Dragon Inc. chad@waterdragoncleaning.com
Crazy ideas are usually the ones that work the best. Thinking outside the wand will take you places and that I truly believe.
Why not try to kill two birds with one gun? Why not call up a well known and reputable roofing contractor. Tell the owner who you are and what you do and the reason you're calling is to see if they have any tear off jobs coming up where you can pick up a square or two of infected roofing.
Sure, some will say no but someone will say yes. Then pick up as much as you want/need for your project.....at the same time you can sell your services to the roofing company. Most will never ever consider sending you work but.....if you don't ask the certainly can't tell you no!
there used to be a company in Orlando who did the same thing as you are describing. I am sure they got a lot of work out of it. Ac will know the name of the company I cant remember It.
It was Roof Life, they got so much work out of it they went out of business.... lol
Remember please everyone, advertising gimmicks work a little to make the phone ring a bit more. Nothing will ever beat a well trained sales team. We are not in a business where we can ever advertise enough to keep all our many trucks busy. Great service sells more jobs! Best advertising there is. Geographically divided territories with dedicated salespersons is the key to growth.
We built a small roof/house/gutter demo. We used black spray paint to infect half the roof and simulate oxidation on the gutter then we used green spray paint from a distance to show algae on the siding. We set it up at trade shows