Want this question answered?
I heard from someone that you just use a capful (a bleach capful) or two.
One teaspoon of bleach is used to disinfect five gallons of water. Therefore, 105.6 teaspoons of bleach would be used to disinfect 528 gallons of water.
Bleach is effective on mold growing on non-porous surfaces, like glass or tiles. If you're looking at the mold or mildew in the bathroom, you should know that the grout in between the tiles is porous, and the bleach will only clean the surface of the grout. When you use bleach to kill mold on non-porous surfaces, dilute it with water first, about 1 cup of bleach to a gallon of water. Then you can either spray it on or wipe it on with a sponge. So for normal household amounts of mold, you don't need much bleach at all. Its important to wash off the bleached surfaces with clean water after as the bleach will exxect the surfaces and can bring about more issues. When clean dry with tissue so that you absorb the maximum amount of liquid thus limiting the cycle For porous surfaces and widespread mold growth, consider calling a mold remediation specialist. They will have the supplies and expertise to know what can be cleaned and what must be discarded for your health and safety.
That does not count as substance abuse if it was only used to clean the bathroom but if you deliberately trying to smell the bleach to get a high then it is substance abuse.
That depends entirely on how much and what kind of bleach. A gallon of your common domestic bleach poured into a well will totally dissipate within a few hours, yet will have killed many microbes in the water. Domestic bleach is usually about 2% chlorine. When I clean a contaminated well I use 68% granulated chlorine and it kills all biological impurities, yet will disappear in about 3-4 days and cause little side effects. Naturally, people cannot drink the water during this period.
You should never put bleach in water to keep it clean. You can not drink water with bleach and it and any other living thing in it will die.
Use a capful for each gallon of water, I use it in my dish water it will kill all the bacteria in your sponges and dishes.
5.00
0.1 gallon of bleach, or 12.8 ounces (just over 1.5 cups)
I heard from someone that you just use a capful (a bleach capful) or two.
about 9.3 gallons
Let's say about 30 gallons.
If the cistern is clean, 15 fluid ounces of 5.25% chlorine bleach (Clorox or Purex) will suffice. If the cistern water is turbid, increase the amount to 24 fluid ounces.
Since the answer to the first question is "no", the answer to the second question is kind of meaningless. Bleach and water will just make you sick, it won't "clean your system."
Bleach can be rubbed or dabbed on material it matters how much bleach is used, if large stain use large amount if small stain use small amount. Bleach is not just used to clean materials it is also used to clean pools and other objects. It is made from chlorine and ozone. It is not made from plant life material.
I would add only 1/4 of a gallon if the level is 0. Then check the level and add a little if needed.
One teaspoon of bleach is used to disinfect five gallons of water. Therefore, 105.6 teaspoons of bleach would be used to disinfect 528 gallons of water.