An asset that pays you back every shift.

A commercial floor scrubber replaces manual labor, reduces downtime, and lowers total cleaning costs—making it an investment, not an expense.

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TitanX Decision Guide

Which Floor Scrubber is Right For Me?

Choose the right TitanX scrubber based on your space size, soil level, turning constraints, and daily cleaning goals. Use the quiz for an instant pick, then confirm with the comparison table.

Best for
Warehouses • Auto shops • Facilities
Decision factors
Brush width • Tank size • Maneuvering
Goal
Faster cleaning with consistent results
Quick Start
60-second recommendation
  • Answer 5 questions
  • Get a TitanX recommendation
  • Verify in the comparison table
  • Use-case + sizing guidance included
Start the Quiz
Walk-Behind
TitanX Helios — 19" Self-Propelled Walk-Behind
Tight aisles
Daily maintenance
Small–mid facilities
Best when you need maximum maneuverability and frequent turns—great for congested layouts, aisles, and mixed-use work areas.
View Helios
How to Decide
Pick by your constraints
Turning radius
Soil level
Path width
Your “best” scrubber is the one that fits your layout and cleaning volume. Use the quiz, then validate with the table and sizing guidance below.
Jump to Comparison

Find Your Best Fit (Interactive Quiz)

Answer honestly based on your real layout and daily workload. Your results will recommend a category and explain why.

1) Facility size (approx. cleanable floor area)
2) Layout constraints
3) Soil level
4) How often are you cleaning?
5) What matters most?
Your recommendation will appear here.
Complete the quiz to generate a TitanX match with a detailed explanation.

TitanX Comparison (Helios vs Eos)

Use this table to validate fit. The “right” scrubber matches your turning constraints, coverage needs, and run time expectations.

Feature
Helios (19" Walk-Behind)
Eos (26" Ride-On)
Best for
Aisles, tight spaces, mixed rooms
Open areas, long passes, large facilities
Layout constraints
Excellent for obstacles and frequent turns
Prefers open lanes; turns require more space
Path width (productivity)
Narrower path = precise cleaning
Wider path = higher output per hour
Daily volume fit
Low to medium daily sqft (or spot work)
Medium to high daily sqft (continuous routes)
Operator fatigue
Standing/walking; better for shorter runs
Riding; better for longer, repetitive routes
Soil handling
Great for daily grime, traffic lanes
Great for large-scale restoration passes
Ideal cleaning strategy
Frequent maintenance + detail passes
High-output coverage + consistent routes
Decision rule (simple)
If your operation is dominated by tight aisles / turns, Helios is typically the better fit. If your operation is dominated by big open floor and you want maximum output, Eos is typically the better fit. Mixed layouts often benefit from prioritizing the “tightest constraint” (the smallest turning areas you must service).

Use-Case Match (Pick Your Environment)

Find your environment below to see the most common “best fit” choice and why.

Want the cleanest “yes/no” check?
If you tell us your daily cleaned sqft + tightest aisle/turn area, you can confidently select the right TitanX scrubber.
TitanX Knowledge Base Industrial Floor Scrubbers
3-Stage Cleaning One Continuous Pass

How Exactly Do Floor Scrubbers Work?

A floor scrubber cleans by applying solution, scrubbing with a rotating brush, then recovering dirty water with a squeegee + vacuum system—so floors come out cleaner and drier than manual mopping.

Consistent Results
Faster Than Mopping
Simple 3-Step Cycle
Visual Breakdown
Core System Overview
3 steps • 1 pass
TitanX floor scrubber diagram showing tanks, control panel, squeegee system, and scrubbing head
Fresh solution is dispensed, the brush agitates soil, and the recovery system captures dirty water into the tank.
The Process
Three Steps Simultaneously
Continuous cycle
  1. 1

    Solution is applied

    Clean water (and detergent, if used) is fed from the fresh water tank and metered to the floor ahead of the brush for even coverage.

    Fresh Water Tank Solution Flow Dispense Control
  2. 2

    Brush scrubs the surface

    A rotating disc brush provides mechanical agitation to loosen debris and lift soil from the surface— this is the primary cleaning action.

    Disc Brush Agitation Soil Removal
  3. 3

    Dirty water is recovered

    The rear squeegee gathers slurry and the vacuum path recovers it into the dirty water tank, helping the floor dry faster.

    Squeegee System Vacuum Recovery Dirty Water Tank
Why it’s efficient: the machine washes, scrubs, and recovers water in a single pass—reducing rework and improving consistency.
Key Components
What each part does
Quick reference

Control Panel

Controls solution flow and cleaning settings to keep performance consistent.

Fresh Water Tank

Stores clean water (and detergent mixture if used) for metered dispensing.

Disc Brush Head

Rotating brush delivers agitation that removes embedded soil more effectively.

Squeegee + Recovery

Channels slurry into the vacuum path to help leave a drier surface.

Dirty Water Tank

Captures recovered water and debris so it isn’t redistributed.

Fill Port

Enables fast filling and routine service for daily operation.

FAQ
Quick answers
Helpful
Do floor scrubbers leave floors wet?
Usually less wet than mopping. The squeegee and recovery system collect water into the dirty tank during the same pass.
What’s the difference between the fresh and dirty water tanks?
Fresh tank supplies clean solution to the floor. Dirty tank stores recovered water and debris after scrubbing.
Can I run only water without detergent?
Yes. Many floors clean well with water only, depending on soil type. Detergent can help with grease and heavy buildup.
What maintenance matters most?
Rinse the dirty tank, clean/inspect the squeegee, and keep the brush area clear. Consistent upkeep supports consistent cleaning.