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Home Tips
Keep
Your Bathtub and Shower Sparkling Clean
Keeping a bathtub or shower
sparkling need not be a chore if you know the right steps to
follow. Regular cleaning once a week usually wins at least
half the battle.
Here are some tips that can help you achieve complete victory.
The
best time to clean a tub or shower is right after using
it, when steam has loosened the dirt. Before you exit, wipe
off the damp surfaces with a towel.
If
you must set aside a bathroom cleaning time, run the shower
on hot for about five minutes beforehand. Then open the shower
curtain or tub door to help loosen dirt on other bathroom surfaces.
(Be sure to close the curtain or door eventually, so it can
air-dry.)
Wiping
tub and shower surfaces while they are still wet is important
if you live in an area where water
is "hard''
(contains minerals). Commercial cleaners applied with a sponge
or damp cloth will remove hard-water scale and film.
For a home-made
cleaner try white vinegar, undiluted or mixed
with up to four parts warm water.
To avoid
bathtub rings, don't use oily bath preparations.
If a ring does form, wipe it off with undiluted ammonia (wear
rubber gloves) or a wet sponge generously sprinkled with baking
soda. For stubborn rings wipe with white vinegar or automatic
dish washing detergent. Rinse.
Wipe mildewed areas with a cloth dipped in household bleach.
Again, wear rubber gloves. CAUTION: Never mix any combination
of bleach, ammonia and commercial cleaners; a toxic gas may
result.
To
reduce and often eliminate mildew, increase ventilation
as much as possible in the bathroom, by installing an exhaust
fan (or by increasing the size of the present fan), and opening
doors and windows soon after bathing or showering. Extend shower
curtains so they dry thoroughly and leave shower doors ajar
so that air can circulate inside the enclosure.
Clean
stained porcelain surfaces with a commercial bathroom
cleaner containing mild abrasives (avoid harsh abrasives) or
by applying a paste of cream of tartar and hydrogen peroxide.
Spread the paste over the stain and scrub lightly; let the
paste dry and then wipe or rinse it off. To shine chrome fixtures,
wipe with rubbing alcohol or a damp cloth dipped in baking
soda.
To
clean a fiberglass tub, use a water conditioner for dishwashers
or a commercial bathroom cleaner containing EDTA (ethylene
diamine tetra acetate).
Wiping with bleach, vinegar or alcohol will clean the caulk
around bathtubs. However, cracked caulk must be replaced.
First, pry out the old caulk with an ice pick or screwdriver
and clean away any residue by wiping with mineral spirits.
Attach masking tape to the tub and wall on both sides of the
gap, leaving a space about 1.3 centimetres (half an inch) wide;
then fill the tub with water to expand the gap fully.
Slice the nozzle on a tube of tub-sealing caulk at an angle
of about 45 degrees to produce an opening about 0.6 cm (quarter-inch)
wide. Starting at a corner, place the nozzle over the seam
between the tub and wall and then push or pull the tube while
squeezing it to force caulk into the gap. Apply caulk at an
even rate.
When finished, smooth the surface with a lightly soaped finger
so that caulk extends on to both strips of tape. Remove the
tape carefully after the caulk has hardened overnight. Drain
the tub. # # # # #
SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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