Dave B
New member
Jeff/Ralph- as usual you pretty much nailed it-always spot on with your posts
Ive seen many guys try and reinvent the wheel
SH is your friend if you use it correctly
Let the chemicals work and do the cleaning!-
use the proper tips for the proper surface
If you make your house wash mix right (for me DS-2gals 12.5 SH,3 gals of water,6-8 oz of elemonator) sometimes a bit stronger, sometimes a bit weaker depending on what im cleaning and how dirty it is usually works for me
Read this board and keep it simple!
^^This
I've been cleaning mostly houses for the last year, anything from vinyl siding to brick to concrete siding. I always us a similar mix. There are great products out there, but there are ways to get by for us new little guys.
So, in your bucket (gonna assume it's 5 gallons), mix (you more experienced guys feel free to correct me if I get anything wrong):
1) 1-2 gallons of SH
[*=1]"SH" is sodium hypochlorite, or bleach. It's typically the bleach you would use in pools. Typically your pool supply companies will sell it at 12.5% strength, hence the "12.5 SH". It's best to guy this stuff fresh, as it looses it potency fairly quickly. Sometimes, 12.5 SH is hard to find. In a pinch, I've sometimes used the 10% SH sold at Home Depot. It's in the pool supplies, sold by the gallon in white jugs sold by a company called SMART I believe. It's not quite as strong as what you would get elsewhere, and you have to be careful that you get some of the newer stock, but again, it will work. Not ideal, but still.
[*=1]1-2 gallons - obviously the more you use the more potent it will be. You will want closer to 2 gallons per your 5 gallon bucket if it is very dirty, susceptible to mold or mildew, etc. Obviously, if you only use the 10% from HD, you will need more per mix.
[*=1]Do not confuse "clorox" with "bleach". You can't raid the laundry room and use the Ms. laundry bleach.
2) 6-8 ounces of surfactant
- Surfactant is any type of some that bonds with soil so that it can be washed away. In the home, these are your detergents. However, you need a detergent that is stable in bleach. Bleach with break down many surfactants, thus making them useless when mixed
- There are many very good, professional grade surfactants. Elemonator is a very good one. This site is full of recommendations of them. If you can get them, I highly recommend it. However, speaking as a guy who's been in your shoes, ordering a supply of these products sometimes isn't feasible for us. You CAN get buy with some cheaper alternatives, however, it won't cling as well to the surface and you will end up using more in the long run, but they will work. One is simply to get a bottle of Gain dish detergent. Gain has shown to be stable in bleach/SH and will work. Again, it's not the best, but not everyone can have the best just starting off. When you can, though, you will want to move up to the professional grade surfactants. It will be cheaper in the long run, you will see better results, and it will be less effort.
- 6-8 ounces of surfactant - do go too much more than that, or you will have problems with soap drying on the walls and windows and you'll never get them clean.
3) Fill the rest of the bucket with water
Drop your downstream siphon tube into the 5 gallon bucket, and that should be enough to do most homes. Spray it, let it dwell for 10 minutes but DO NOT LET IT DRY and then wash it off.
Downstreaming SH/bleach is safe. You are diluting it in your mix, and then your downstream is diluting it again at somewhere around a 1:7 to 1:10 ratio. Plus, all the rinsing you do after applying it is diluting even further. When all is said and done, most swimming pools will have more bleach in them than what you are using. I don't think people are worried about that concentration or we wouldn't be swimming in it or having our plants around them. If you want to be extra cautious, wet down the grass, shrubs, and plants around the walls before you apply the cleaning mix. This will protect them even further.