English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

On the (numerous) occasions I've run out of laundry detergent mid-loads and need some in a pinch, I've always been concerned about what to use or not use instead. I was considering baking soda, dishwasher detergent, hand soap, dish soap (like Dawn, etc).

Any suggestions of what does and does not work?

2007-11-25 10:26:59 · 4 answers · asked by The Organic Sister 3 in Home & Garden Cleaning & Laundry

4 answers

have used dish soap but added softener to it so it wouldn't suds away,
actually a grease cutting dish soap is better, if you can find a surfactant, [suds killer ]

2007-11-25 10:34:15 · answer #1 · answered by William B 7 · 1 0

Check out my web page for detergent alternatives.

We’re changing the scientific protocols and procedures to make indoor air not just pleasant, but to safely remove from our indoor environment many dangerous and harmful substances.
You already know that Fresh Air by EcoQuest is the only air purification system endorsed by and approved by The Space Foundation as is used in NASA space vehicles and space stations. Here’s some things you may not know:
· Our units were placed in the Pentagon after the horrors of 9/11 prevented humans from entering and working because of burnt jet fuel, burnt building materials, and the tragedy of burnt human bodies. After sending 2 18-wheelers of our units to place in offices on Friday, employees and service members returned safely to work on Monday.
· Highly technical, delicate equipment in Iraq was being damaged by the baby-powder fine dust that could not be kept out of work areas at a military facility there. The cramped living and working quarters of the military members contributed to odors, transmission of communicable illnesses, breathing challenges. After installation of 10 Fresh Air units, the entire facility as well as the well-being of the personnel changed dramatically for the good.
· Lamar University Museum contained priceless, irreplaceable artifacts when Hurricane Rita struck. Every professional estimator was adamant that most of the artifacts were mold infested and a total loss. The costs for repair and restoration of remaining artifacts and displays was astronomical. Our top commercial/industrial experts used our equipment and not one artifact or display was lost, the entire building was safely remediated at a fraction of the cost bid by other companies using older technologies.
· Schools, restaurants, courthouses, bars, hospitals, and residential customers (millions of them) rate our technology from 93 to 98% satisfactory… and no wonder!
· Particulates drop 250 times faster than with gravity alone. 99% to 99.9999% kill of staph, resistant staph, strep, type 3 virus (this is Avian flu virus family) molds; mildew; stachybottrys mold; e-coli; salmonella; etc., etc… all proven in independent laboratory tests for surface and airborne infections. Removal and deodorizing of tobacco smoke; 100% removal of many VOCs.
For your use, this means your home smells clean and fresh…. Those 10,000 bacteria on your keyboard are reduced 99.9999% so only 1 remains. Those airborne and exposed molds are killed and the gasses emitted by them swept from the air. Pet dander swept out of the air, dust and dustmites swept away, pollens swept away. You breathe more freely when the air is clean. But you can rest more easily knowing you have taken the best steps you can to ensure a healthier indoor environment for you and your family and guests!

Thank you,
www.ecoquestintl.com/farny

2007-11-25 20:52:55 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

very confusing task. seek onto yahoo and bing. that can help!

2014-10-31 01:21:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A small amount of shampoo.:)

2007-11-26 07:44:33 · answer #4 · answered by Backwoods Barbie 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers