Dry Slurry and Alkaline Rinses

Trip Moses

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Cleanworks

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At Mikey's Fest in Phoenix, Laura from Legend Brands handed out samples of Dry Slurry. I forgot all about it until the other day. I think it works fantastic. At a PH of 9.6 I'd be curious as to what it leaves the carpets at and what the ideal PH of my prespray should be?
As long as you don't over dilute the product it works well. Used it for years. The pH of your carpets will drop close to neutral usually about 1/2-1 hour after cleaning, even with a 10-11pH prespray.
 
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As long as you don't over dilute the product it works well. Used it for years. The pH of your carpets will drop close to neutral usually about 1/2-1 hour after cleaning, even with a 10-11pH prespray.
I remember you telling me about this at Mikey's Fest. If I remember correctly you use a alkaline rinse often? I thought you also mentioned that the soil in the carpet would also alter the Ph?
 

Dolly Llama

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stop listening to soap salesmen telling you you need an acid rinse for everyday CC'ing .

and pay no attention to the pack following mooks that parrot the same tired myths

it does nothing to add to "rinse-ability" over alkaline .
It has nothing to do with resoiling.
and doesn't clean/finish as well as alkaline.
and it leaves it's own residue

they only thing it does is leave the carpet in a lower state of ph.
which doesn't hurt a thing, but doesn't do a thing either as a practical matter

now I'm sure the rocket scientists will be along shortly to tell us how Ph makes a dime's worth of difference .....



here's deal, Nick ,
Dry Slurry is a great product .
But unless a chitpit, you only need 1/3-1/2 of suggested dilution.

..L.T.A.
 

Cleanworks

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I remember you telling me about this at Mikey's Fest. If I remember correctly you use a alkaline rinse often? I thought you also mentioned that the soil in the carpet would also alter the Ph?
Yes, the soil load is acidic. You can apply an 11 pH prespray, scrub it in and find it has dropped close to neutral with a pH indicator pen. There is no need to further neutralize that. I usually use a 10 pH prespray followed by a 9.5 pH rinse and when I test the carpet, it usually reads close to neutral. This can be affected by prior cleanings and if you use an 11-12 pH prespray but normally I don't have any issues. An alkaline rinse usually out leans an acid rinse. As long as you don't leave the carpet too wet, it will dry soft and residue free.
 
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Cleanworks

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The main thing with your rinse, no matter what you use, is to check it and make sure it's metered properly. Usually have it set at no more than 2 gph.
 

Cleanworks

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I think I'm at 3?
Those meters aren't always accurate. You can adjust your dilution ratio down to compensate. Cranking up the soap never makes it clean any better, just creates a mess. Same with your prespray. Making it stronger doesn't help, using more of it works. For example instead of increasing the dilution, just re-spray an area and rinse again. Same with rinsing with a rinse. Just go over those areas again with the same ratio.
 
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Those meters aren't always accurate. You can adjust your dilution ratio down to compensate. Cranking up the soap never makes it clean any better, just creates a mess. Same with your prespray. Making it stronger doesn't help, using more of it works. For example instead of increasing the dilution, just re-spray an area and rinse again. Same with rinsing with a rinse. Just go over those areas again with the same ratio.
I've never felt that I was putting down to much rinse. Before this I was running Prochem All Fiber Rinse. It calls for 3-8 gph but it can also be used as a post treatment product.

I don't think I could get mine dialed down to 2 gph because my adjustment is so touchy. So I would probably have to adjust my dilution like you mentioned if I wanted to decrease the amount of rinse I'm applying.

I'm due for a bucket test on my inline sprayer because I feel it's putting down to much product, but I almost always mix my prespray to the directions of the manufacturer. When I get my water softner I may adjust it accordingly then.

@Dolly Llama check it out paragraphs.
 

Cleanworks

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I've never felt that I was putting down to much rinse. Before this I was running Prochem All Fiber Rinse. It calls for 3-8 gph but it can also be used as a post treatment product.

I don't think I could get mine dialed down to 2 gph because my adjustment is so touchy. So I would probably have to adjust my dilution like you mentioned if I wanted to decrease the amount of rinse I'm applying.

I'm due for a bucket test on my inline sprayer because I feel it's putting down to much product, but I almost always mix my prespray to the directions of the manufacturer. When I get my water softner I may adjust it accordingly then.

@Dolly Llama check it out paragraphs.
I am blessed with very soft water here. I can cut down manufacturers directions by at least 1/3. Always experimenting and testing.
 
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