It’s gross there I could use some help.

  • Nougat@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I feel like it’s worth mentioning here:

    DO NOT MIX BLEACH AND AMMONIA. You can die.

  • qooqie@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    No stupid questions should also mean no stupid answers imo. You’ll need a sponge, a hard scrubber of some sort (I think steel wool fuck your bathroom up). Grime remover of some sort. Soap will work but some stuff is just too tough like hard deposits think “Calcium Lime Rust” for this. Whatever you do DO NOT mix bleach and ammonia, you’ll kill yourself. It’s not too hard to clean overall just a pain in the ass. Keep it clean by doing little bits all the time and it won’t be so bad. I’d also suggest some rubber gloves just because those chemicals will fuck your skin up and whether you like it or not it will get absorbed into your skin

    • Mr PoopyButthole@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      CLR is a cleaning product most popular as a spray. Yellow bottle. It’s really effective, and significantly safer than most harsh cleaning products.

      Wet & Forget can be great for a lot of tile or glass showers, but it does seem overpriced.

      You can also get little cleaning pods that hang into the toilet bowl to prevent build-up from happening.

      Avoid the tablets that go in the toilet tank. They can do real damage to your plumbing and it’s not worth it.

      Last advice is only helpful if you own your home, but upgrade your exhaust fan. The humidity can cause dust and such to buildup faster.

  • GluWu@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    I’m really surprised at how many people have their why not to mix cleaning supplies wrong.

    Bleach + ammonia can make chloramine gas by the bigger problem would be making NCl3 and blowing your toilet up.

    Bleach + acid(like cleaning vinegar) is what makes chlorine gas that will auschwitz your bathroom.

    Bleach + rubbing alcohol actually makes chloroform, which is fun.

    • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      I’m surprised how many people use bleach / bleach based products. You really don’t need such aggressive stuff the majority of times. Regular cleaners work just fine. Or is that an US thing where bleach is in every cleaning product or something?

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Just as an aside, Chloroform is not fun. It’s not at all like it is portrayed in movies, where you splash a little on a rag and it will make someone pass out with no consequences.

      Chloroform can render you unconscious in sufficient concentrations, but it will also cause brain damage and might kill you.

    • lseif@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      they dont want you mixing random chemicals, because they are worried you will make a special potion which gives you superpowers

  • ChocoboRocket@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Big fan of 50:50 water and grocery store white vinegar with a tiny drop of dish soap.

    For glass I’ll also add a little rubbing alcohol to the above, for heavier grease or spots on glass I’ll just use 70% rubbing alcohol

    Bathrooms can have a ton of different surfaces, I’ve had great success with VIM bathroom and kitchen but I’m sure anything branded for kitchen/bathroom will handle sink/shower/tub/toilet well.

    CLR for anything involving (Calcium, Lime, Rust) tougher sediment buildup.

    I get sponges that basically look and feel like the rough part of Velcro and are thin for a sponge, like the green scrubby rectangles, but superior imo.

    When they’re getting tired they become my household cleaning sponge and work great! A decent sized brush can be handy, and definitely rags/paper towels for wiping things dry if necessary.

    Squeegees are fun, not particularly handy for bathroom cleaning unless there’s a lot of tile/tempered glass/mirrors or you like using it to wipe down the shower when you’re finished

    • deejay4am@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      White vinegar is good on any wood or porous surface because it’s small enough to get inside and kill the biological things (black mold, etc) while bleach just tends to just clean the surface and evaporate quickly.

  • deejay4am@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Don’t buy any of those toilet tank tablets. They often will corrode and wear down the tank valve over time, and your toilet will start to run on its own (or could even break).

    • iluminae@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Can confirm, will destroy the rubber/plastic bits in your toilet.

      That being said, I still use them all the time and replace the toilet innerds after a few years. I just would rather clean the toilet every few months and replace toilet parts every few years than clean the toilet all the damn time and have old working toilet parts :shrug:

  • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    At the very least, I’d recommend you:

    • gloves - because you’ll get really close to that gross shit. You don’t want to touch it.
    • a sponge - it doesn’t need to be new; your old kitchen sponge is enough, just don’t use it again in the kitchen. Use the yellow side to spread the cleaning agent, and the green side to remove obnoxious grime stuck to something. (Do it gently, and only with a really old sponge, to avoid scratching the surface.)
    • a bucket - mostly to mix some soap and water.
    • a dry rag - mostly for finishing/drying. A cringey old shirt that you won’t be using again is usually enough.
    • toilet brush - don’t use the sponge to clean inside the toilet bowl; you’ll be spreading the bacteria from your shit and piss to the rest of the restroom.

    Everyone has the cleaning agents that they swear upon, so look for something that works for you. For me it’s

    • alcohol vinegar - to get rid of that brown crust in the sink (water in my city is hard as a brick) and around the shower drain. I usually apply it, wait a few minutes, then use the sponge to scrub it a bit. Then I remove the vinegar with the rag.
    • bleach - exclusively used inside the toilet bowl. I squish some bleach there, then scrub it with the toilet brush, then flush it off, making sure that there’s no bleach behind.
    • disinfecting agent - I squish a bit of that inside the toilet bowl and just leave it there. It smells good, and it gets rid of the bacteria.
    • an ammonium-based cleaning agent - I squish it on obvious grime on the walls (except the above), then scrub it with the sponge.
    • soap and water - to “wash” the walls with the sponge.
    • plain water with some disinfecting agent - to rinse it. Then I just remove the excess water with the rag and let the restroom to dry naturally (with closed doors otherwise my cats will step on the bathroom, step outside, and now I got to clean the bathroom again plus the corridor and furniture).

    Important detail: do not mix any two of the cleaning agents that I’ve mentioned. Specially not ammonium and bleach.

    For reference, the disinfecting agent that I use is called “pinho sol”, but I have no idea if it’s sold outside Brazil. You probably have some similar product wherever you live.

    • _dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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      11 months ago

      the disinfecting agent that I use is called “pinho sol”, but I have no idea if it’s sold outside Brazil

      The US has it, it’s called pine-sol… pinho == pine lol.

      • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Yup, that’s the stuff. It’s mostly a finishing touch, to get rid of bacteria.

    • Fog0555@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      disinfecting agent - I squish a bit of that inside the toilet bowl and just leave it there. It smells good, and it gets rid of the bacteria.

      Is that Pine Sol?

  • TonyHawksPoTater@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    Bleach is awesome! Mix it with some water, use a rag or sponge and scrub. DO NOT mix anything else with the bleach. Bleach is basic, and a lot of other cleaning products are acidic. Mix a strong enough acid with a strong enough base and you get mustard gas. It doesn’t smell too great, on top of other issues. If you want to clean with bleach plus something, be safe and buy premade cleaner with bleach.

    EDIT: I should also say you can’t use bleach on everything, it can damage some things. Always test a small, hard to see area before you clean a surface with bleach. For the stuff that you can’t get bleach on, you can use white vinegar or all-purpose cleaner.

  • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    For the bathroom, I swear by my steam cleaner. No chemicals, just hot steam. If that doesn’t get it, vinegar is good escalation. Soak the spots in vinegar and you should be able to wipe it off easy. Maybe screw you shower head off the wall and let it soak over night.

  • andrewta@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    If you have tile in your bathroom, do a test in a small out of the way on the tile when cleaning. That way if it damages the tile you don’t have a major problem. This actually goes for all surfaces.

  • CTDummy@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Bleach for pretty much every surface compatible with it. CLR for the shower itself (or a bathroom cleaner specifically for scale and soap scum). Simple Green (or whatever the equivalent is where you’re from) for every thing else. Buy a decent non-scratch scourer (or a couple) as well as some magic erasers to help with any scale that’s resistant to removal. Oh and glass cleaner for the mirror and maybe shower. Nitrile gloves never hurt if you’re dealing with heavy duty chemicals either. Keep the bathroom well ventilated and never mix chemicals.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      Magic erasers are just melamine foam. You can buy it in bulk much cheaper than buying the name brand ones.

      Also, a lot of rags. Costco has a pack of 50 terrycloth towels for under $10 that work great.

  • litchralee@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Specifically for toilet bowls, if you find that a stain won’t shift even after using a normal toilet bowl cleaner solution and a normal toilet brush, don’t try to brush harder as this will scratch the porcelain surface. Also don’t try something abrasive like steel wool or the green/blue side of a kitchen sponge.

    Instead, what you want to do is dissolve the stain. Others have suggested CLR and that might work. But if not, then you can obtain “acidic toilet bowl cleaner”, which contains hydrochloric acid, aka muriatic acid. This will remove most anything normally staining a toilet bowl, but make sure you handle it sturdily and carefully; it can mess you up. Gloves and eye protection are highly recommended, until the bowl is brushed, the stain is gone, and the bowl is flushed. Turn on the bathroom fan or open a window for ventilation during and after cleaning.

    In general, for difficult cleaning jobs, don’t try to clean harder, but clean smarter. If you’re putting your whole body weight into a towel or a brush, there’s almost certainly an easier way. Good luck!

    • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      FYI, be sure to read the ingredients carefully on everything you use. I use a standard-looking Lysol toilet cleaner that’s based on hydrochloric acid. It does not suggest that it’s particularly strong (beyond the usual marketing hype) or has this as a primary ingredient.

    • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      What in the hell are you eating?

      I’ve never had a stain that wouldn’t come off with normal cleaner and a toilet brush…

      Are you baking it on with the hair dryer after you drop a deuce?

      • fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 months ago

        In places with “hard” water (lots of calcium) you tend to get a calcium plaque in the pan after several years. It will absorb any iron in the water and turn brown.

        It’s pretty much a rock growing on the porcelain. A brush won’t move it.

  • AHorseWithNoNeigh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 months ago

    One thing I’ve learned is if you have hard, yellow stains inside your toilet, you can use a pumice stone to magically erase it away. Blew my mind.

  • gum_dragon@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    It’s not the only one you should use, but white vinegar is underrated. It’s safer than most options, strong if used right, and deodorizes. You can buy bottles of stronger %s at a hardware store and mix what you need in a spray bottle.