Friday, June 16, 2006

Clean Out Your Tub and Shower "Almost" Immediately

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Cheap, Easy and Without Minimum Risk of Luxury Loaded Sandwiches in Banks!

Consumer Reports says the Scrubbing Bubbles Shower Cleaner missed whole areas, left streaks, stickiness and spot on walls and shower doors. After one month some showers actually looked worse than before! Consumer Reports says to save the $25 and use elbow greece, but how modern we are when we win the scrubbing Olympics! Much easier to win a bathtub triumph is to take a damp mop and add baking soda. It's easy to reach all the tub, it just takes about three minutes of easy mopping compared to about 15 or 20 of heavy scrubbing without the mop. This is because most of the bathtub dirt is actually dander mixed with soap. Baking soda is a soda and this is from the same word as salt, and salt combines with fat or oil like in the dander to form Soap. Soap washes away with water by its molecular structure so it and adheres to the water in the mop so well it washes away much faster. Then to finish up if the boss is about to enrich us, use a washcloth with baking soda on it and zoom in with extra clean of the areas you can't see, I use a wash rag on my face to see what the beach will be like when I go in a month!

This is an allergy free way to clean out a tub fast with minimum scrubbing, more powerful yet is to add vinegar in with the baking soda on the wet mop. Even so a certain amount of dander will remain, vino and baking soda though good, is not quite complete. I tried all kinds of cleanup compounds before this and this was the most of value of all time yet for my hopes of winning the swim marathon in rock n roll bathtub competition! All the rest took a lot more labor and were real pricey.

There is an even more powerful way to clean out the tub for when the boss is about to arrive. The way (even with allergies if used well) is to use bleach and baking soda. Because it's more powerful I'm more cautious and cautious about allergies and use it less often than the vino/baking soda. The baking soda makes the bleach stronger so it takes less bleach, good for my allergies and the ecology because it converts almost completely to salt water. To apply the bleach to the tub with minimum fumes, first turn on the tub water with the drain open. Use the right amount of water to form a small pool with continual circulation that doesn't get larger or smaller. On the other side of the tub higher up pour a puddle of bleach, the two puddles are so if the bleach runs toward the drain it blends with the water without corrosion. This also moves more of the fumes down the drain while you clean. Take a bleach proof cleaning brush with a handle of about 3 feet, and dip the bleach and paint it where you want to clean the tub (like bathtub rings). By using a narrow broad brush, and just adding a thinner coat of bleach than on a mop, you use less bleach, so fumes are reduced and it dries faster, and you're farther away from the fumes with more reach, by pouring the bleach in the tub, with no splatter of bleach. The small amount of fumes will start to fill the room evenso but if you add the bleach quickly you'll be out of the room before they do, important for allergies. When you're finished, leave the water running, and leave the room with the door closed with the bathroom fan on while you wait for the bleach to dry. Once the bleach is dry and well soaked in (a day is a good wait, maybe hours if you're on the web) go over the tub with the baking soda on another scrub brush (Always use a seperate mop for bleach or bleach with baking soda like on floors because it's stronger than just bleach so it stays in the mop longer, not for use e.g. in cleaning rugs with the mop). If at any time the fumes bother you, turn on the shower and you can restart later, the shower both cleans the air and hoovers the bleach down the drain. This is how to have a cleaner tub, cheap with minimal scrubbing, and this seems to be better for my allergy than the boss when she says I must be clean!





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