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07-28-2018 01:59 PM
when my father inlaw was sick for over a year my mother inlaw use that in every load and she allways added it at beginning of wash cycle with detergeny and clothes allways came out really good. shes allergic to regular detergent so she uses all free n clear and she had no problem using lysol laundry sanitizer. good luck.
07-28-2018 03:21 PM
I didn't know it was around a year ago.
07-28-2018 07:52 PM
I have been looking for this product as long as it has been advertised on TV, but cannot seem to find it ..... it is in the laundry section where detergent is sold isn't it? I have tried all over, Walmart, Publix, base commissary, I want to use it on my dog's quilts!
07-28-2018 08:10 PM
I found it in the laundry section at Walmart where they have the Oxiclean booster stuff. @Hooty
07-29-2018 12:20 AM
I've been using it in the fabric softener dispenser since I stopped using softener a year or so ago.
07-29-2018 12:25 AM
@Hooty wrote:I have been looking for this product as long as it has been advertised on TV, but cannot seem to find it ..... it is in the laundry section where detergent is sold isn't it? I have tried all over, Walmart, Publix, base commissary, I want to use it on my dog's quilts!
@HootyI had been buying it in the smaller bottles, as that's all i could find locally & then, I found it on Amazon in the large 90oz bottle with a handle, so I ordered that. Recently, I found the larger 90 oz bottle at Walmart, so I picked it up there.
07-29-2018 07:24 AM
Why would one use this? Just washing your clothes would clean them, unless you do really dirty work, for whites bleach would be best,or peroxide. I do use odo ban , for moping sometimes .
07-29-2018 07:35 AM - edited 07-29-2018 07:36 AM
@goldensrbest wrote:Why would one use this? Just washing your clothes would clean them, unless you do really dirty work, for whites bleach would be best,or peroxide. I do use odo ban , for moping sometimes .
I've got some microfiber mop pads and also some doggie towels that stink even after I wash them. I need something to kill the bacteria that is causing the odor. This Lysol product is suppose to kill 99.9% of the germs. @goldensrbest
I don't use regular bleach.
07-29-2018 08:36 AM
@Tigriss wrote:I've been on Amazon looking at this product. Many people point out that it requires you to leave it in the rinse cycle for 16 minutes before finishing the rinse. I always use an extra rinse on my clothes just for good measure anyway. My machine has an extra rinse cycle I always leave on. If I was to use something like this, then I would use it in the first rinse. The instructions state that it isn't meant to be mixed with laundry detergent. That is concerning. I did find other products that are enzyme cleaners, Kleen-Green, Kleen-Free, Odorban Biolaundry Enzyme Cleaner, Pesil Hygiene disinfecting rinse, and Nature's Eradicator. I did see people's reviews for the Lysol product that said it gave them hives and rashes. I would want to make sure that it is rinsed out. I pretty much just use Persil detergent and some oxy-clean when things are tough. The Lysol thing is pretty much liquid oxy-clean or peroxide cleaner. Y'all do know that Clorox makes a color safe bleach that you can use as well. Vinegar is also good for cleaning. You can always do a pre-wash soak in the Lysol product then launder to make sure the chemical is rinsed out, but this will make your laundry take longer. My father worked in a papermill welding. He would smell so that we had a hamper out the back door where he parked to take off his clothes there and leave them outside. Mom did a soak in Odorban, the regular one she got from Sam's, and then rinsed and washed. It took all those horrid smells out. He always went to work clean and fresh but came back the smell of a paper mill. If you have ever driven by a paper mill, then you know what I'm talking about.
I think you should read the ingredients in oxiclean and peroxide then in the lysol. You won't find any similarities.Peroxide is H2O2 - water with an extra oxygen molecule and oxiclean is oxygen- when added to water it becomes H2o + an extra oxygen = H2O2 or peroxide. But that is not at all what the lysol product is.The ingredients are a bunch of unpronouncable chemicals.
07-29-2018 10:36 AM
@151949 wrote:
@Tigriss wrote:I've been on Amazon looking at this product. Many people point out that it requires you to leave it in the rinse cycle for 16 minutes before finishing the rinse. I always use an extra rinse on my clothes just for good measure anyway. My machine has an extra rinse cycle I always leave on. If I was to use something like this, then I would use it in the first rinse. The instructions state that it isn't meant to be mixed with laundry detergent. That is concerning. I did find other products that are enzyme cleaners, Kleen-Green, Kleen-Free, Odorban Biolaundry Enzyme Cleaner, Pesil Hygiene disinfecting rinse, and Nature's Eradicator. I did see people's reviews for the Lysol product that said it gave them hives and rashes. I would want to make sure that it is rinsed out. I pretty much just use Persil detergent and some oxy-clean when things are tough. The Lysol thing is pretty much liquid oxy-clean or peroxide cleaner. Y'all do know that Clorox makes a color safe bleach that you can use as well. Vinegar is also good for cleaning. You can always do a pre-wash soak in the Lysol product then launder to make sure the chemical is rinsed out, but this will make your laundry take longer. My father worked in a papermill welding. He would smell so that we had a hamper out the back door where he parked to take off his clothes there and leave them outside. Mom did a soak in Odorban, the regular one she got from Sam's, and then rinsed and washed. It took all those horrid smells out. He always went to work clean and fresh but came back the smell of a paper mill. If you have ever driven by a paper mill, then you know what I'm talking about.
I think you should read the ingredients in oxiclean and peroxide then in the lysol. You won't find any similarities.Peroxide is H2O2 - water with an extra oxygen molecule and oxiclean is oxygen- when added to water it becomes H2o + an extra oxygen = H2O2 or peroxide. But that is not at all what the lysol product is.The ingredients are a bunch of unpronouncable chemicals.
Then that explains why so many people on Amazon complained of rashes and hives after correctly using this. They just wore the clothes and slept in the sheet washed in it. I prefer to keep things as simple as possible.
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