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.
1 tbs of bleach to 1 gallon of water.
The detergent you are using might be too strong and it is causing some parts of the fabric to fade off. There are a lot of detergents today that has bleach in it so you have to be careful in choosing your detergent.
If rust stained several garments, launder them in RIT rust remover or a similar product. For a small number of rust spots, wet the garment, sprinkle Zud cleanser on the spots, gently work it into the material, wait about 30 minutes before rinsing or rewashing.
Answer#1By destroying pathogens via oxidation. All you need is 2ml per gallon of water. Using more than that could release excess chlorine into the air. You do NOT want to breathe that in!
Ya of course there is, it is somehing new called BLEACH?!?
You can't remove bleach spots using a different bleach.
Try using oxy clean powder this may work. I tried oycy clean and it did not work. I used "YELLOW OUT" It is a powder that comes in a plastic 1 lb. 2 oz. container. Most likely I bought it at WalMart, not sure. It worked on a cotton-polyester top that I bleached by mistake, which then turned it a tannish/yellow. I followed the directions on the back of the YELLOW OUT container; soak in a gallon of water with 1/2 cup of YELLOW OUT for 20 minutes and then wash with detergent not containing any peroxide or bleach (use color safe detergent) The top came out bright white!
why is using detergent and water to clean oil a physical change
High efficiency (or "HE") detergent is designed to produce fewer suds (foam and bubbles) than regular detergent. So, yes, it is important to use HE detergent if you're using an HE washing machine! Using regular detergent in an HE machine would be like using regular dish washing detergent in an automatic dishwasher - imagine the foam! Using HE detergent in a regular machine, however, is just fine - only difference is that you would notice fewer suds.
You can sanitize non-porous materials using bleach. To do so, use 2-1/2 (two and a half) tablespoons of beach dissolved in 1 (one) gallon of water. In other words, use a 1% bleach-to-water solution. Since a gallon is 256 tablespoons the math is to multiply 256 by 1%; represented as an equation: 256 * 0.01 = 2.56 Bleach is caustic and will corrode metals. Do not let soak indefinitely. Typically, 30 minutes is all that is needed.
Standard laundry bleach works fine in a pool. You should be sure to get plain bleach, not scented. The chemical in bleach is exactly the same as the chemical in pool chlorine but is generally about half the concentration. Most bleach is 6% sodium hypochlorite while chlorine for pools is 10-12%. So generally you would use about twice as much bleach as chlorine. The amount you add must be determined using a test kit to determine your current level of chlorine. An online calculator to use to determine the amount of bleach to add is at http://www.poolcalculator.com. As an example, if you have 0 ppm chlorine now and want to raise it to 4 ppm in a 23000 gallon pool, you would need to add 196 ounces (about 1-1/2 gallons) of bleach. For more help maintaining your pool using standard products like bleach, baking soda, and borax, search on "bbb method."
20 ppm means 20 gm of bleaching powder be added in water