Arne wrote:I backed into my g/f's car, side to side on the bumper (my left rear to her right front, both plastic), left a smudge, no real damage..
I've used scrubbing bubbles on lots of stuff, so I sprayed it on the black smudge... it came off... then I polished it... all gone..
I mention this because I've used it on my van's leather upholstery to get rid of stains, etc.... always worked well with no damage.. where nothing else would do it.
Like they say try it on a small area first to check....
PanelDeland wrote:I use "Green Alcohol" to clean windows.Costs abot 50-75 cents a pint and works way better than commercial glass cleaners because it leaves no streaks.
CAJUN LADY wrote:Do you have to cut the vinegar with water when added to the laundry? I have those front loading washer[b]/dryers (ones that look like the laundry mat kind) so I guess I would add it where it says put the bleach. Do the clothes smell like vinegar?
steve smoot wrote:CAJUN LADY wrote:Do you have to cut the vinegar with water when added to the laundry? I have those front loading washer[b]/dryers (ones that look like the laundry mat kind) so I guess I would add it where it says put the bleach. Do the clothes smell like vinegar?
I don't have a clue, Becca, but as pretty as you are, no one will ever notice. [
Alan and Lianna wrote:No diluting. Add 1 cup of straight vinegar to the rinse cycle. There is not any odor at all. It makes clothes softer and no need for "downy" type products. It also reduces lint in the dryer. I was very skeptical and now I use it for just about everything. There is just about nothing that you cannot do with it and it's really cheap. It cleans jewelry and appliances really well too. This book was a really fun read.
Lianna
steve smoot wrote:
I clean the stainless steel face of our refrig, microwave, stove and dishwasher with WD-40. It removes all finger prints and smudges for the stainless steel. WD-40 also cleans aluminum, and it is easy on your hands.
deceiver wrote:Not household but camping hint.
Live in a colder climate and have access to bio or eco bricks? They usually sell them at places they have firelogs and wood pellets.
You can't transport firewood anywhere today and it's expensive at campsites. Biobricks are compressed wood the size of a brick. They come nine in a brown wrapper. Drop it in the fire ring, light the paper and have a fire for 2-4 hours depending on how much air hits it.
Endorsed by the National Parks association. About the same price as home firewood (not the pricey stuff they sell at capsites) and neatly packaged.
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