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Throw out the cistern blocks and the artificial perfumes, you
will not need them.
Wash down the whole of the toilet, including behind the seat, with a proper hard
surface detergent in solution and then rinse it off. Then wipe dry with a half damp
cloth, now leave it to dry. Wash the bowl by pouring a splash of the neat detergent
in the water, and scrubbing with the toilet brush. Now flush the toilet.
You will need to descale a toilet about once a month -urine
and hard water is a good combination to make scale - that's the staining around
the lip of your bowl and this is the stuff that your bleach treatments and anything
else you are using is not removing Acid is the only scale remover which is going
to work in areas of hard water. Use phosphoric acid or citric acid for preference.
Vinegar and anything else you might have read about will not work. So go and buy
a proper descaler from a janitorial supplier and keep it to clean the grout and
the taps and the shower head as well. Also use this to clean your shower cubicle.
Once your toilet is descaled, all it requires is a daily wash, including a wash
around the bowl, as previously shown.
No. Toilets do not smell if they are cleaned properly with detergent
as we have indicated. Bacterial growth occurs when surface cleaning has not been
carried out properly. Surface cleaning will remove almost everything which could
cause you problems. Bleaching, and the use of disinfectants will not replace a good
clean and descaling because it is the scale and the uncleaned surface soiling which
attracts bacteria. So you can try to think you are cleaning when you put a bit of
bleach in the
bowl, but in fact you are not. Can't beat a good clean. Get those hands wet.
NOTE WELL: never mix an acid descaler with bleach. Keep
them very far apart. We have however seen toilets awash with neat bleach, and others
with almost neat coal tar disinfectant, but still dirty, and we mean dirty! Bleach
removes scale colour but not the scale, and coal tar disinfectant can be poisonous
in heavy quantities. The difference from a cleaned toilet to an uncleaned toilet
is easy to see. So before you get sanitisers on the brain, clean the area properly
first.
TILE GROUT you can clean grout with the same phosphoric acid
descaler you used on your toilet. You may need to leave it on the grout for a time
to work, like for example overnight, if you have heavy scale build - up and mold
stains. Rinse well and leave to dry. Most grout is dirty, because you haven't rinsed
your last lot of detergent out from the tile, and you have used dirty washing water.
Grout should be left to dry, but needs to be dried quickly. Flooring grout can be
dried by a mop or with a pass with a wet/dry vacuum cleaner
NOTE WELL: have you a marble tiled bathroom? - Well do
not use any acids on this surface, That is, no vinegar, lemon juice, nor anything
else even vaguely acidic. Neither bleach, nor ammonia. To clean grout use a neutral
detergent solution but you will need to leave on the surface for a half hour, and
rinse off well. You may need to scrub the grout with a brush after treatment to
remove any surface soiling left.
Marbles, limestone and clay floorings are delicate materials
to clean, so treat them as such. You will never ever get a nicer surface, and it
will last a lifetime but treat with care and use care when cleaning.
Never use any acids - and that includes vinegar, lemon juice, and most grout cleaners.
Never use bleach, and take great care on the alkalis. You will find that a low foaming
detergent based around d-limonene will clean marble quite effectively.
These surfaces will clean with a very dilute detergent solution - which should not
be washing - up liquid. They should be well rinsed after cleaning and left to dry.
They can be polished up with a dry cloth if needed, or gently buffed.
You should never scrub any marble with a scouring pad, especially
not a metal scouring pad, the damage will be pure vandalism, because the small pieces
from the scouring pad will stick to the marble and rust in situ, so your marble
will show sometimes extensive rust staining. This can only be removed by re-polishing,
which can be an expensive procedure.
Use extra care if the marble is pitted or has lost it's shine - this means it needs
repolishing and that is a specialist job. Never be persuaded that an acid etch will
clean the marble - it will not, and will damage the marble.
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