This malkin loves the steamer to clean the floors, the tile, the ...porcelain conveniences..., the grimy places, and pretty much everything else that needs cleaning.
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This malkin loves the steamer to clean the floors, the tile, the ...porcelain conveniences..., the grimy places, and pretty much everything else that needs cleaning.
I always clean my floors with antifreeze, don't you?
(vinegar,warm water,borax and an old fashion mop at our house) My asthma does not like all these new fangled (I am 40) modern day cleaning products. I think they are all not very good. I try and stick to the ol stand by's. Vinegar is wonderful. And cheap!
I absolutely know you are being facetious here, but this is what people will glean from these so called "email warnings".People pass these around with good intentions of warning others, not really understanding the science of what's behind the warning, or how much truth (or not) is in them.
I've thought about steam cleaners, but I'm not sure what they'd be like in actual use. Does the cleaner loosen dirt (or soap scum or whatever), and then you wipe it with a cloth or mop?
BTW, I use Nature Clean products. They aren't easy to find in the US but they work really well and are supposedly as non-toxic as possible.
Pam
I've been using a steam mop for about a year now.
When I first got it, I was hoping the steam would dry the floor as it went, but it basically is just like mopping - only you end up mopping around dirt all over (instead of rinsing out the mop head). So it's best if you have 2 or three of those cloths.
I'm not crazy about it, but it IS easier than the conventional mopping, and it DOES take dried up mud or food off the floor. But I would also caution not to use it too much on wood floor as I've read the heat and water sometimes warps it. If you have a lot of tile, it'll be great. And if you live somewhere warm, even greater because then the water will dry quicker.
I definitely would not use the steam cleaner on wood (or cork, or bamboo), but it's wonderful on tile, and also on the stovetop and oven. I wouldn't have thought it possible to clean an oven without lye or worse, but it takes the crud right off. For me, unless there's an extreme amount of dirt, a single wipe after steaming is enough.
Last night while watching TV, I saw an add for "Swiffer" (didn't know what it was before). Watching the ad I thought, hmmm, that looks kinda cool (I'm a marketer's dream).
Then I realized I saw a TE thread about it and here I am reading about whether I want to buy it or not.
Scary - TE is becoming the Wikipedia of my daily life.
I have a swiffer dry w/ vac, that takes the wet cloths.
I found that while it's great for dust on the floor, I much prefer a microfiber dustmop with a real vacuum for true hard surface cleaning. The wet cloths were a total waste IMO, really smeary and not very effective.
I like what my son said about the swiffer : "looks like more junk that will last a year and then end up in a landfill". I do have issues with the disposable cloth aspect. At least with my microfiber dust mop I can wash it and re use it.
I've seen an MSDS for coffee :rolleyes:
and one that wasn't a joke.... an MSDS for Prismacolor markers.... it listed amount you would have to ingest to get sick... If you could sit down and eat 100 magic markers hats off to you...
One thing I have heard, I'm not sure if this is true either though- if you have sanded something to varnish it do not use a swiffer cloth to clean up the dust before sanding. The varnish won't stick and you'll have to do the sanding all over again.
Our laminate floors are fine with the steamer and we have not-very-nice-at-all wood floor in the kitchen and I use it there too. I have a couple of the cover cloths for the floor attachment thingy.
I use it on everything in the bathroom. They mfr. cautions about glass, but I just hold it a little further away so I don't crack the glass and haven't had a problem in 3 years. The little squeegee attachment was cute, but for glass or mirrors that matter, I wipe it with a cloth.
Sometimes I spray random rug spots and wipe at them with a cloth.
I like that it doesn't require any special chemicals or consumables.
It is so dry here that the humidity that it adds is welcome and the little film of wet dries in seconds. I'm not sure I'd like it so much if I lived in a humid place.
Oh- my husband also brews beer which we dispense out of taps on a chest freezer. Every now and then there is a dramatic event where a spray of beer flies majestically. Using the steamer after that happens is good too.
what sort of steam cleaner do you guys have? there's no way I can clean stovetop/counters or anything that isn't on the ground. It's akin to taking a vacuum cleaner on the counter :confused:
Don't forget that the individual ingredients most likely do not maintain their individual properties when mixed together. Mixing them together produces a chemical reaction (constantly going - usually two-way reactions), so the amount put into the mixture is most likely not the amount of solution actually present in the mixture. Of course, I don't know how they measure the contents of cleaning products (chemical analysis versus recipe). Chemistry is fascinating.
Water is a good example. A glass of H2O isn't pure H20 (minus the minerals). It is actually H2O with trace amounts of HO, and H30+, yet you don't see "hydronium ions" and "hydroxide ions" on the ingredients label in a bottle of water. :D
It's called "The Shark." The canister is maybe the size of a 1-1/2 gallon container. It has a shoulder strap, or it can sit on the counter while you do the stovetop. Mine looks a little different from the current model pictured in the link.