I love this so much---learning the chemistry behind products helps me know what to use to tackle jobs! Am i right to conclude that using washing soda and liquid peroxide I can get a similar result to using oxy-clean?? I ask because sometimes I run out of oxiclean and want to DIY some until I get to the store.
just binged this whole series, after like the first 20 videos of youtube cleaning searches giving all these generic "cleaning tip" vids it's such a breath of fresh air for someone to actually explain the real nitty gritty Whats and Whys of using a certain cleaning product. I'm autistic, and people giving these random recommendations of DIY cleaning tips would give me anxiety because I wouldn't fundamentally understand their application and uses. I feel like I can walk down a shopping aisle now and actually feel confident (ha, channel name) in what I want and more importantly NEED to maintain my home
Will you please explain why Out White Brite ( ingredients-SODIUM HYDROSULFITE, SODIUM CARBONATE, SODIUM METABISULFITE) shouldn’t be mixed with Oxygen bleach. Out White Brite is a laundry booster to whiten clothes where the water has a lot of iron.
@@Lisaann8699 Oh gotcha, I didn't know what you meant at first lol. The Biz product isn't a "bleach." It's not chlorine bleach nor is it an oxygen bleach. It is an enzyme cleaner. It breaks down and eats stains on your clothes like food. I think I mentioned enzyme cleaners in video 2 of this series entitled "What's in the Bottle," but maybe I should dedicate an entire video specifically about them. Thanks for the idea 🙂
i really enjoyed your videos mate thank you so much! subscribed and am about to browse the rest of your channel! i'd love to see a series on some of the 'old school' household cleaning products less commonly used today (such as borax, cloudy ammonia, washing soda etc). Or possibly a series on simple DIY mixtures or 'grandmas recipes' from yesteryear that actually work and how (chemically speaking). please keep the chemistry/nerdcore info coming! love it!
Clorox has an expiration date. After that date, which is about 6-8 months, it turns into a saline substance, highly ineffective. It would be like cleaning with a rag soaked in salt water.
Yep. Don't feel bad about going slow because, honestly, I need you to go at this pace. Absolutely. And thank you.
you are welcome 🙂
Beautiful content! ❤
Thank you CDO mate 😊
you are welcome!
I really like how clear your explanations are. Humor always comes through
glad you found the video valuable 🙂
I have found if you soak a stained piece of clothing in Oxy clean, it usually comes out. Thank you for your video. We all needed this explanation. 😊
happy to help!
Loved how you explained the difference between the two. I didn’t know oxy clean just broke down into water and oxygen.
Happy to help! Glad you found the video valuable👍🙂
You nailed the speed 👍🏼 loved the course!
@@Khroma-uz3zk glad you found it valuable
Excellent presentation! Thank you!😊
@@peggychabala5493 you are welcome
Fantastic video. Informative. Thanks!
@@EyeOfScrutiny you are welcome
I love this so much---learning the chemistry behind products helps me know what to use to tackle jobs! Am i right to conclude that using washing soda and liquid peroxide I can get a similar result to using oxy-clean?? I ask because sometimes I run out of oxiclean and want to DIY some until I get to the store.
You are absolutely correct. Washing soda and peroxide will give you similar results to OxiClean.
@CleanWithConfidence H2O2 concentration also matters.
I am LOVING this technical series. Thanks for slowing it down and for the visual aids. Keep them coming.
Thanks for the encouragement 🙂
Great relevant info, thanks much!
Happy to help
Thank you for this excellent explanation!❤
you are welcome!
This was helpful. Your videos are truly helpful! @@CleanWithConfidence
you rock buddy . thanks for the explaining ..... I was looking for that all day .
happy to help!
awesome delivery as always!!! Thank you for 6:29 I will use that line in the future, you totally rock!
Happy to help
just binged this whole series, after like the first 20 videos of youtube cleaning searches giving all these generic "cleaning tip" vids it's such a breath of fresh air for someone to actually explain the real nitty gritty Whats and Whys of using a certain cleaning product. I'm autistic, and people giving these random recommendations of DIY cleaning tips would give me anxiety because I wouldn't fundamentally understand their application and uses. I feel like I can walk down a shopping aisle now and actually feel confident (ha, channel name) in what I want and more importantly NEED to maintain my home
@@bubblepop3063 thank you for the comment!! Glad you found the videos valuable 🙂
This video was so informative thank you
@@jamielee9327 happy to help
Excellent informative video. Thankyou
you are welcome
Very well explained
happy to help
Will you please explain why Out White Brite ( ingredients-SODIUM HYDROSULFITE, SODIUM CARBONATE, SODIUM METABISULFITE) shouldn’t be mixed with Oxygen bleach. Out White Brite is a laundry booster to whiten clothes where the water has a lot of iron.
because the sulfites it contains, essentially neutralizing the actual method of cleaning action
@@MrJCerqueira
So sulfites and Oxygen bleach counteract each other? Thank you for your time.
Use chlorine if you had the stomach virus, use oxygen bleach for bacteria, for body fluids use chlorine of everyday cleaning use oxygen bleach
Is there anything more potent than chlorine bleach to remove stains ... like maybe a stain exorcism?
Thank you for the explanation! How does oxyclean compare to Biz?
you are welcome! 🙂 What do you mean by "Biz?"
@@CleanWithConfidence The brand Biz bleach.
@@Lisaann8699 that's the brand. Go by the content, and then filter by the explanation in this video.
@@GooogleGoglee ok. Got it. Thank you!
@@Lisaann8699 Oh gotcha, I didn't know what you meant at first lol. The Biz product isn't a "bleach." It's not chlorine bleach nor is it an oxygen bleach. It is an enzyme cleaner. It breaks down and eats stains on your clothes like food. I think I mentioned enzyme cleaners in video 2 of this series entitled "What's in the Bottle," but maybe I should dedicate an entire video specifically about them. Thanks for the idea 🙂
Good person 😳, i thank you👏👏
happy to help
thanks for the info
you are welcome
LOL at the CDO comment at the end!
lol
This guy not only knows his cleaning, but also knows his chemistry 😂
Yes🙂
POWER!
i really enjoyed your videos mate thank you so much! subscribed and am about to browse the rest of your channel!
i'd love to see a series on some of the 'old school' household cleaning products less commonly used today (such as borax, cloudy ammonia, washing soda etc). Or possibly a series on simple DIY mixtures or 'grandmas recipes' from yesteryear that actually work and how (chemically speaking).
please keep the chemistry/nerdcore info coming! love it!
sodium percarbonate is also known as sodium carbonate peroxide btw
Clever ending
i use both at the same time in a bucket with hot water to clean my mop head.
Why is my Chlorine bleach making my whites yellow?
Thanks😂
@@cindysmith6612 happy to help
Gotta love a cleaner with CDO 🤣
Lol
Chlorine is an ozone depletor. It takes between 20-120 years for chlorine to break down in the upper atmosphere.
You may be right
It reacts with organic matter in waste water long before any reaches the ozone layer.
the fumes I believe@@FrankGutowski-ls8jt
Clorox has an expiration date. After that date, which is about 6-8 months, it turns into a saline substance, highly ineffective. It would be like cleaning with a rag soaked in salt water.
0:20 "I'm gonna speak slower in this video... so you [plebs] can follow" while making that patronising face... smh
🙂