Emulsification Or Acid Rinse.

CanadianRuss

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not sure what you mean..

are you wanting to use a rinse through your TM that leaves a polymer behind?
Sorry I meant some cleaners just use an emulsifier with there rinse. Especially with upholstery. To me I would prefer to use a pre spray with an acid rinse.
 

Jim Pemberton

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Russ, this has been a subject of discussion on MB since its inception. A kind (an more qualified) soul will like give you links or show you how to do a search.

I will answer to the question when it comes to upholstery cleaning here though:

Upholstery fabrics are thin, relative to carpet, and can often be thoroughly preconditioned to the point where its not necessary to use an emulsifier in the "rinse/extraction" part of the cleaning process. Using soft water as a rinse can be a very good alternative, or you can use an acidic rinse agent if you need to:

1. Neutralize your preconditioner, should it be alkaline in nature.

2. Stabilize dyes, assuming that you have tested the dyes and know that an acid will stabilize them. (Not all dyes are stabilized by acids, and some bleed to acids, though that is a rare occurrence.)

3. Soften fabrics. Pile fabrics, such as velvet and chenille, tend to dry softer when rinsed with an acid rinse, though soft water also has been shown to assist in this case.

4. Restrict browning. "Restrict" is my weasel word of choice that I use instead of "prevent". Some fabrics will still experience browning, even when rinsed with an acid, if you allow them to take too long to dry.

Because of the above benefits, I use an acid rinse when I clean for "friends and family" or the odd antique or museum piece people ask me to see if I can restore. (Come to think of it, my daughters think I'm an odd antique or museum piece).

I hope this helps.
 

hogjowl

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I guess I know what you're asking now.

If I were using an encapsulating prespray, I'd not use a rinse agent. If I felt I just HAD to use something, it would be an encapsulating rinse.

Why negate the effects of your encapsulating agent by rinsing it totally out?

I use an acid rinse in almost all situations, but that's because I use standard cleaning agents and want to rinse well. Sometimes I use a alkaline emulsifier on nasty rentals.
 

Mark Saiger

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Russ, this has been a subject of discussion on MB since its inception. A kind (an more qualified) soul will like give you links or show you how to do a search.

I will answer to the question when it comes to upholstery cleaning here though:

Upholstery fabrics are thin, relative to carpet, and can often be thoroughly preconditioned to the point where its not necessary to use an emulsifier in the "rinse/extraction" part of the cleaning process. Using soft water as a rinse can be a very good alternative, or you can use an acidic rinse agent if you need to:

1. Neutralize your preconditioner, should it be alkaline in nature.

2. Stabilize dyes, assuming that you have tested the dyes and know that an acid will stabilize them. (Not all dyes are stabilized by acids, and some bleed to acids, though that is a rare occurrence.)

3. Soften fabrics. Pile fabrics, such as velvet and chenille, tend to dry softer when rinsed with an acid rinse, though soft water also has been shown to assist in this case.

4. Restrict browning. "Restrict" is my weasel word of choice that I use instead of "prevent". Some fabrics will still experience browning, even when rinsed with an acid, if you allow them to take too long to dry.

Because of the above benefits, I use an acid rinse when I clean for "friends and family" or the odd antique or museum piece people ask me to see if I can restore. (Come to think of it, my daughters think I'm an odd antique or museum piece).

I hope this helps.


I just cut and paste this into my planner for future reference too...

Thank you :)
 
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dealtimeman

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Where does the encapsulation part come into his answer?

Was the question modified or edited?

Jim p answered as to the way we do it. With the exception that we do it both to upholstery and to carpet, we don't run more juice on top of Presley as a rinse.
 

Desk Jockey

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I don't use encapsulating presprays while doing HWE, so I can't say from experience.

If fact, I don't even know why I am responding to this.

Carry on ...
Trying take up the slack on DAP's? Honorable to attempt it but lame result. You come of looking really stoopie.

My apologies if you really ARE Stoopie. :winky:
 
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Desk Jockey

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I think it depends upon what we are cleaning. Light to moderately soiled All Fiber rinse works really well.

However if it's more than moderately soiled I think it takes more punch to be efficient with production time and effectively deliver the desired results.
 

hogjowl

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I think it depends upon what we are cleaning. Light to moderately soiled All Fiber rinse works really well.

However if it's more than moderately soiled I think it takes more punch to be efficient with production time and effectively deliver the desired results.
Fortunately, it's not what you think that counts.
What do Dan and your crew chiefs think?
 
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Desk Jockey

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Yes Prochem's Upholstery Prespray or Fine Fabric Prespray.

However on soiled or heavily soiled upholstery it brightens up much better with an emulsifier than just an acid rinse alone. Test it yourself.

I love an acid rinse but when its soiled I want it to come as clean as I can get it. If I'm really concerned about resoling or stabilizing dyes then I'd come back with an acid. I rarely need to do that but I have done it.
 
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Jim Pemberton

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These are questions I ask of myself that doesn't have a complete answer:

1. Is it better to precondition and rinse, which allows you to neutralize and remove residue, but potentially leaves the fabric wetter?

2. Or is it better to run a moderately alkaline upholstery detergent through the unit, with little or no preconditioning? It will leave the fabric in an alkaline state, but unless its raw cotton, a bleeder, or a soft texture, does it matter? To take it a step further, what is more likely to bleed...a wet fabric left in an acid condition, or a nearly dry fabric left alkaline?

When it doubt, its best to be both dry and neutralized, but in many cases getting it dry very very fast is probably the most important thing.

Enough of my musing........just DON'T leave it wet AND alkaline!
 

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