A floor scrubber is a mechanical device designed for cleaning various types of floors. It combines the functions of dispensing cleaning solution, scrubbing the floor surface with brushes or pads, and vacuuming up the dirty solution to achieve efficient floor cleaning and drying.
The history of floor scrubbers dates back over 100 years. The first floor polisher was developed at the start of the 20th century to relieve the monotony of tedious floor cleaning work. In the 1930s, the variant for wet floor cleaning emerged. And in the 1950s, the first scrubber machine with integrated suction function appeared on the market. In 1986, the first walk-behind machine with roller brushes was introduced, which scrubbed, vacuumed and swept in one step, significantly improving cleaning performance on structured floors. Since then, floor scrubbers have continued to evolve to meet customer requirements, incorporating new technologies and features such as platform strategies, eco-concepts, and digitalization.
The main purpose of a floor scrubber is to clean floors quickly, efficiently, and thoroughly. It can remove dirt, grime, stains, and other contaminants from various floor surfaces, including concrete, tile, marble, wood, and vinyl. Floor scrubbers are widely used in commercial, industrial, and institutional settings such as warehouses, shopping malls, schools, hospitals, and offices to maintain clean and hygienic floor conditions.
At its core, a floor scrubber works by dispensing a cleaning solution onto the floor through a solution dispensing system. Then, brushes or pads rotate at a certain speed to scrub the floor surface, breaking down dirt and grime. After that, a suction system vacuums up the dirty solution and debris into a recovery tank, leaving the floor clean and dry.
Some common terms related to floor scrubbers include: