Clean It Up
UK Window Cleaning Forum => Window Cleaning Forum => Topic started by: peekeclean on November 29, 2018, 09:48:20 pm
-
hi all can anyone give me some advice on sodium hypochlorite 15%? iv a small job to clean some realy bad white cladding on a house and thought id use some of this as it did a good job on my patio,been looking on youtube at ways to do it by no dilution rate for it so any help would be great?.
thanks joe
-
I would use a traffic film remover as its far safer.
You will probably turn the plastic orange and/or stain in.
If you really want to use SH then you're looking at a 1.0-2.0% recipe
-
hi all can anyone give me some advice on sodium hypochlorite 15%? iv a small job to clean some realy bad white cladding on a house and thought id use some of this as it did a good job on my patio,been looking on youtube at ways to do it by no dilution rate for it so any help would be great?.
thanks joe
1 ltr of hypo to 4 ltr water , it can turn plastic particularly old white plastic yellow but it will revert back to white in a couple of hours , you can try a weaker mix if you want 1 ltr of hypo to 5 ltr water , try a weak mix and increase the strength untill you get the results you want
-
We use a lot of hypo in our pressure washing but not for cladding cleaning - TFR is a much better suited chemical
spray on and scrub off - you'll get fantastic results without any dangers you get with hypo
Darran
-
well ive think ive read on here that some used biological washing powder cant remember what ratio ive used it on conny roofs and seemed to work ok but it has to be biological I thought it sounded strange at first but has they say nothing ventured bla bla
-
We use a lot of hypo in our pressure washing but not for cladding cleaning - TFR is a much better suited chemical
spray on and scrub off - you'll get fantastic results without any dangers you get with hypo
Darran
What you say is true but if you have old faded UPVC hypo will make it look much better than tfr products will ever do as it will bleach the staining , we always use hypo now on old plastic and it makes a huge difference to the finished look BUT and it’s a big but you do have to be careful not to go to strong with the mix
-
It depends on the staining - hypo can’t/ does not bleach everything
Darran
-
We use a lot of hypo in our pressure washing but not for cladding cleaning - TFR is a much better suited chemical
spray on and scrub off - you'll get fantastic results without any dangers you get with hypo
Darran
What you say is true but if you have old faded UPVC hypo will make it look much better than tfr products will ever do as it will bleach the staining , we always use hypo now on old plastic and it makes a huge difference to the finished look BUT and it’s a big but you do have to be careful not to go to strong with the mix
How careful, what strength mix? 2%
-
Anywhere from neat to 3% - depends on what the the job is - wear protective clothing unless you like to ruin your cloths - eye protection and don’t go mixing it with any old chemical - I’ve seen a reaction even with tfr - just an inert detergent for smellability 😁
Apply with a quality pump sprayer like ik9 and don’t do it on very windy days
Common sense rules - in reality unless you spill it neat over a lawn your unlikely to kill off any plants
Darran
-
Anywhere from neat to 3% - depends on what the the job is - wear protective clothing unless you like to ruin your cloths - eye protection and don’t go mixing it with any old chemical - I’ve seen a reaction even with tfr - just an inert detergent for smellability 😁
Apply with a quality pump sprayer like ik9 and don’t do it on very windy days
Common sense rules - in reality unless you spill it neat over a lawn your unlikely to kill off any plants
Darran
sod that!its not worth the risk on a f/s/g clean job...... virosol in a backpack plugged into my pole is all i use,maybe some cif if the white frames are really black.....i hate the smell of bleach too which is another reason to not use it.....
-
We use a lot of hypo in our pressure washing but not for cladding cleaning - TFR is a much better suited chemical
spray on and scrub off - you'll get fantastic results without any dangers you get with hypo
Darran
What you say is true but if you have old faded UPVC hypo will make it look much better than tfr products will ever do as it will bleach the staining , we always use hypo now on old plastic and it makes a huge difference to the finished look BUT and it’s a big but you do have to be careful not to go to strong with the mix
How careful, what strength mix? 2%
2% mix should be fine if it does go yellow/brown it will return back to white in a couple of hours . NEVER USE 15% NEAT ON PLASTICS 😬😬😬😬😬
-
thanks for all the replys guys. whats the easy way to make a 2% mix then in liters like 4l water to 1hypo? thanks joe
-
Normal house bleach is 2% strength and some even come pre scented. So if its just the odd job you get, is fsg jobs just buy some for as n when
-
Just use bleach.
For fsg etc I always wack a bit in.
In my van I carry all purpose cleaner, washing up liquid, bleach and cream cleaner.
All usually Asda smart price or similar cheap supermarket brands.
Mix them all together in spray bottle for a lovely blend of cladding/Conny/fsg cleaner.
Simple supermarket ingredients, no need for virosol/tfr/hypo and all that jazz
All purpose cleaner is a degreaser like G101, flash or virosol but a bit thinner as it's cheaper, just use it neat .. it's like 25p for 500ml.
Bleach is well like weak hypo and cheap as chips
Washing up liquid is a degreaser plus it adds a nice foam to allow the other ingredient a to stick and dwell.
Cream cleaner is abrasive so good for restoring uPVC and I've found that slapping some on the brush head for first cleans and cladding works really well.
-
Just use bleach.
For fsg etc I always wack a bit in.
In my van I carry all purpose cleaner, washing up liquid, bleach and cream cleaner.
All usually Asda smart price or similar cheap supermarket brands.
Mix them all together in spray bottle for a lovely blend of cladding/Conny/fsg cleaner.
Simple supermarket ingredients, no need for virosol/tfr/hypo and all that jazz
All purpose cleaner is a degreaser like G101, flash or virosol but a bit thinner as it's cheaper, just use it neat .. it's like 25p for 500ml.
Bleach is well like weak hypo and cheap as chips
Washing up liquid is a degreaser plus it adds a nice foam to allow the other ingredient a to stick and dwell.
Cream cleaner is abrasive so good for restoring uPVC and I've found that slapping some on the brush head for first cleans and cladding works really well.
Try reaserching what mixing washing up liquid and bleach/ hypo causes , these chemicals should never be mixed together highly dangerous and illegal
-
On the advise of another window cleaner, I now use Flash liquid.
It does the job brilliantly.
-
On the advise of another window cleaner, I now use Flash liquid.
It does the job brilliantly.
So it might but it also causes cancer !!!!!
-
so do fumes from a diesel heater ;D
-
Just use bleach.
For fsg etc I always wack a bit in.
In my van I carry all purpose cleaner, washing up liquid, bleach and cream cleaner.
All usually Asda smart price or similar cheap supermarket brands.
Mix them all together in spray bottle for a lovely blend of cladding/Conny/fsg cleaner.
Simple supermarket ingredients, no need for virosol/tfr/hypo and all that jazz
All purpose cleaner is a degreaser like G101, flash or virosol but a bit thinner as it's cheaper, just use it neat .. it's like 25p for 500ml.
Bleach is well like weak hypo and cheap as chips
Washing up liquid is a degreaser plus it adds a nice foam to allow the other ingredient a to stick and dwell.
Cream cleaner is abrasive so good for restoring uPVC and I've found that slapping some on the brush head for first cleans and cladding works really well.
Try reaserching what mixing washing up liquid and bleach/ hypo causes , these chemicals should never be mixed together highly dangerous and illegal
It'll be reet old lad
-
On the advise of another window cleaner, I now use Flash liquid.
It does the job brilliantly.
So it might but it also causes cancer !!!!!
I actually rung clover chemicals to ask them weather I could mix their surfactant with hypo, they said it wouldn’t cause any harm at all.
So I’m not sure about those claims.
However I would definitely use caution, I’ve started using only a small amount of surfactant in my softwash mix as I found it wasn’t really necessary, I still get good results without it being really ‘sticky’
We’re outside in the fresh air which helps. It’s cleaners who work with bleach all day 5 days a week that I think are at risk.
-
On the advise of another window cleaner, I now use Flash liquid.
It does the job brilliantly.
So it might but it also causes cancer !!!!!
I actually rung clover chemicals to ask them weather I could mix their surfactant with hypo, they said it wouldn’t cause any harm at all.
So I’m not sure about those claims.
However I would definitely use caution, I’ve started using only a small amount of surfactant in my softwash mix as I found it wasn’t really necessary, I still get good results without it being really ‘sticky’
We’re outside in the fresh air which helps. It’s cleaners who work with bleach all day 5 days a week that I think are at risk.
I would ask them to put that in writing and supply mdsa sheets to prove what they have said , they won’t and cannot as that is total rubbish this is the whole problem when stockists make these false statements it is illegal to add anything to bleach/ hypo unless it has specifically be made to do so and does not cause adverse effects such as halothorms and chloroquine s that are known cancer causing agents . Just adding washing up liquid to hypo will cause this and how many people openly advise using it as a surficant , be very careful what you are using especially if you employ as it will come back and bite you on the bum
-
I don’t employ splash, but I’d be interested in any formal proof that washing up liquid mixed with bleach is a cause for concern.
I’ve been thinking of using ‘softwash surfactant’ from bonymans. Looks good, and is safe (unless they are lying, in which case they’d be in serious trouble)
-
ammonyx Lo
Is safe and very good
-
Just use bleach.
For fsg etc I always wack a bit in.
In my van I carry all purpose cleaner, washing up liquid, bleach and cream cleaner.
All usually Asda smart price or similar cheap supermarket brands.
Mix them all together in spray bottle for a lovely blend of cladding/Conny/fsg cleaner.
Simple supermarket ingredients, no need for virosol/tfr/hypo and all that jazz
All purpose cleaner is a degreaser like G101, flash or virosol but a bit thinner as it's cheaper, just use it neat .. it's like 25p for 500ml.
Bleach is well like weak hypo and cheap as chips
Washing up liquid is a degreaser plus it adds a nice foam to allow the other ingredient a to stick and dwell.
Cream cleaner is abrasive so good for restoring uPVC and I've found that slapping some on the brush head for first cleans and cladding works really well.
Your probably not a million miles away from the gear ionics are now selling....
Mr B
-
I don’t employ splash, but I’d be interested in any formal proof that washing up liquid mixed with bleach is a cause for concern.
I’ve been thinking of using ‘softwash surfactant’ from bonymans. Looks good, and is safe (unless they are lying, in which case they’d be in serious trouble)
I have recently been on a softwashing course and learned a lot you would think that putting washing up liquid in hypo would be pretty harmless the two products on the own are quite safe but mix them together and they produce the things I mentioned earlier that are known cancer causing agents . By mixing certain chemicals that are quite safe on there own you can make mustard gas , or chlorine gas, there chemicals are commonly used in the home quite safely but mix them together and the will kill you . Terrorists make explosives from chemicals commonly found in the home also it’s just a case of mixing them and you will get an explosive . Sometimes a little knowledge is dangerous, as I say I learned a lot and have altered the way I do things now , again don’t believe all you see or read on the internet or YouTube there is a lot of false and misleading information out there
-
I agree you can never be to cautious, but it’s hard to find any information at all on fairy and bleach being dangerous.
It needs to be ammonia and bleach to create mustard gas. Anyway, I think I will use the bonymans softwash surfactant to be safe.