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Homeowner Forum / Cleaning / October 2006



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Is bleach dangerous?

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mm - 11 May 2006 01:19 GMT
How dangerous is bleach to fabrics or leather?

A friend is recommending spraying a 50/50 solution of bleach and water
on auto carpet to get rid of mouse urine smell, etc.

He says he thinks it will only fade cotton.  Is that true?

What about polyester carpet,

and the cloth or leather seat covers?   Do you think the seat covers
might bet oversray, or the vinyl border of seats?

Won't bleach put holes in fabric, especially if it's not rinsed well.

His second suggestion was to start with a 25/75 weak solution, and
move up to a 50/50 solution.

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Phisherman - 11 May 2006 02:49 GMT
>How dangerous is bleach to fabrics or leather?

Household bleach can weaken and/or damage fabrics or leather.  Leather
treatments or cleaning is best left to a professional.

>A friend is recommending spraying a 50/50 solution of bleach and water
>on auto carpet to get rid of mouse urine smell, etc.
>
>He says he thinks it will only fade cotton.  Is that true?

No.  Bleach can fade many fabrics, even colorfast.   As a general rule
household bleach should not be used on color fabrics.

>What about polyester carpet,
>
>and the cloth or leather seat covers?   Do you think the seat covers
>might bet oversray, or the vinyl border of seats?

Perhaps.

>Won't bleach put holes in fabric, especially if it's not rinsed well.

It could.

>His second suggestion was to start with a 25/75 weak solution, and
>move up to a 50/50 solution.

Both of these are rather strong, considering the typical application
is 1 cup household bleach to an entire laundry load. Personally, I
would not use a bleach spray on carpet or leather goods.  To rid urine
odor you can use an enzyme cleaner available in the pet
store/department.

>Remove NOPSAM to email me.  Please let
>me know if you have posted also.
Nan - 11 May 2006 12:13 GMT
>>His second suggestion was to start with a 25/75 weak solution, and
>>move up to a 50/50 solution.
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>odor you can use an enzyme cleaner available in the pet
>store/department.

I'm in agreement with Phisherman.  What your friend is suggesting has
great potential to damage your car's interior.  You'd be better served
having it professionally detailed by someone trained in leather
cleaning.

Nan
mm - 12 May 2006 02:44 GMT
>>>His second suggestion was to start with a 25/75 weak solution, and
>>>move up to a 50/50 solution.
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
>Nan

I posted your warnings, about what not to do for mouse urine.  Today
he replied:

>I tried Nature's Miracle, and Febreze, and neither appeared to work-
>so I thought.  I went out today, and not a smell to be smelled in the
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>prob got down there, too.  It looks curable though. YEAH!  Thanks for
>all the input.

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Nan - 12 May 2006 11:31 GMT
>I posted your warnings, about what not to do for mouse urine.  Today
>he replied:
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>>prob got down there, too.  It looks curable though. YEAH!  Thanks for
>>all the input.

Thanks for posting his response.  I'm glad he found a solution :-)

Nan
Muvin Gruvin - 15 May 2006 12:52 GMT
transferred bleach solution from one bottle to another. The bottle from
Costco is so huge and heavy.  Not much room to store in my narrow
laundry room. So I poured some of it into a smaller bleach bottle (same
brand bottle too)  I can fit that smaller bottle in the space next to
the dryer. Had not used it for many months. To my dismay when picking up
that bottle it left a yellowed stain on the vinyl floor.
Don't think there is anything that can save the vinyl. Luckily it is out
of sight.

My daughter also had an experience with liquid soap stored on top of her
dryer or washing machine.....it caused the paint to peel.  Luckily the
machine was new and under warranty and they replaced it.
She now has something under the soap bottle like a folded bath towel or
glass pyrex baking dish.
Phisherman - 16 May 2006 00:38 GMT
>transferred bleach solution from one bottle to another. The bottle from
>Costco is so huge and heavy.  Not much room to store in my narrow
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>She now has something under the soap bottle like a folded bath towel or
>glass pyrex baking dish.

I just bought a new gallon of household bleach and I noticed that the
plastic container is much thinner than containers in the past.  I
recommend storing bleach in a cool dark location, preferably on a
tray.  Bleach is highly reactive and decomposes fairly quickly, so it
is better to buy in quantities that can be used in a month or two.
sawney beane - 16 May 2006 07:14 GMT
>> transferred bleach solution from one bottle to another. The bottle from
>> Costco is so huge and heavy.  Not much room to store in my narrow
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> tray.  Bleach is highly reactive and decomposes fairly quickly, so it
> is better to buy in quantities that can be used in a month or two.

Vinyl flooring doesn't stand up to a pH above 9.  Bleach is about 12.6.

According to Clorox, the shelf life of their 6% bleach is six months.
Their 5.25% bleach lasts three months.  The last three digits of the
code tell what day of the year the bottle was produced.  The digit
before that is the year.
jww - 16 Jun 2006 00:16 GMT
i moved into a flat in japan with a smelly carpet (the previous owner had a
dog)
it was suggested to sprinkle bicarbonate of soda powder into the carpet. we
could not believe it would do anything but went ahead with it.

it did seem to work though.

grind it in and leave for a while, then hoover it out. it didnt seem to do
any damage and the smell was largely reduced.
mm - 29 Oct 2006 22:40 GMT
>>> transferred bleach solution from one bottle to another. The bottle from
>>> Costco is so huge and heavy.  Not much room to store in my narrow
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
>code tell what day of the year the bottle was produced.  The digit
>before that is the year.

Interesting. If I hadn't used a lot of bleach to kill the moss on my
wood fence, I would still be using a bottle from 25 years ago.

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