Phil Addison wrote:
sorry, bit cryptic comments, out of time.
On 28 Apr 2005 13:24:07 -0700, in uk.d-i-y wrote:
newly incorporated material snipped
Oils
and lubricants?
What about silicone grease as used for assembling rubbery things, and
compression polypipe fittings
Spray on silicone for lubricating curtain runners (and other plastic
moving parts)
3-in-1 oil - more of a penetrating oil
do those have cleaning uses?
Under dishwasher detergent - add that it corrodes some steel cutlery,
Are you thinking of old copper steel cutlery?
Chlorine bleach:
containers. If so prob worth restating it here (as well as under
limescale).
It is under the chlorine bleach entry, so maybe I'm misunderstanding
you.
Spray and wipe cleaners:
Produce noxious fumes. Contain ammonia.
Really? never noticed that.
they add perfumes to try to disguise it as much as poss.
The liquid runoff is toxic if eaten.
drunk surely. Ingested better.
I cant think of a scenario where someone is liable to drink it, but it
is relatively easy for it to get into food.
- saliva: still the best cleaner for fine art oil paintings, but
not
available in litre bottles 
No its not. It might work, at your risk, but certainly not the best.
Its what a fine art restoration expert said, so maybe we need some good
references.
- Autoglym glass cleaner: one of the best commercial
Eh? Autoglym is a cutting/polishing paste for restoring paintwork. An
up
market t-cut.
autoglym is a brand name for a range of products.
Hartshorn powder: used to clean silver plate. Wipe a hartshorn and
water paste onto the silver, allow to dry, and brush off. Alcohol
in
the paste will help to remove tarnish.
maybe that's what is in Silvo.
.... or autoglym?
- caustic soda: strong alkali, cleans ovens, unblocks drains.
Toxic,
irritant, can cause serious eye injury. One of the high risk
cleaners,
follow instructions with care.
It is important to add crystals to water gradually, and never the
other
way round. Use rubber gloves, plastic apron, goggles. Again
proprietary
stuff with added 'cling' is probably more effective.
last sentence belongs elsewhere
i dont understand
- washing soda: degreases when used with boiling water. For clothes
and
drain unblocking. The majority of drain blockages are mostly
solidified
fat. Discolours aluminium.
*Dissolves* aluminium generating H2. Didn't you do the milk top in
washing soda experiment at school?
ok, will try again there. I used w soda in an aluminium machine for 10
years with no problem, so need to convey the right level of dissolve.
Glo-fuel for model aircraft: various different formulae exist,
containing methanol, oils, solvents such as ether, etc. Glo-fuel is
highly volatile, highly flammable, explosive, very toxic, narcotic,
containes ether which is an early and rather risky general
anaesthetic
from the Victorian era, and the fumes can be fatal. A powerful
solvent,
for what?
everything, anything, brains, liver...
****:
Do we have to use the vernacular?
its just what it is: a better suggestion? Turd? I'll try that
cheers,
NT
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