Clorox is the Manufacturer (the Company that makes the bleach). Bleach is the product (the actual bottle) that Clorox makes. Different company's make bleach also.
If there was a different chemical in the spray bottle before you put the Clorox Bleach into it the molecules from the different chemical could have changed the composition of the Clorox Bleach.I Believe the Clorox is so caustic it is eating at the metal spring. I've put Clorox in spray bottles before and have rinsed them thoroughly. In time, weeks to months the spring seems to be dissolving and sprayer works more and more poorly until it stops working. Currently I'm using a clear sprayer and I can see the corrosion on the spring.If you know of an all plastic sprayer mechanism, please post it here. Thanks!
No, Clorox toilet bowl cleaner does not currently have hydrochloric acid in it. It has a bit of sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) and a bit of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and is about 95% water.
Actually, Clorox is just the brand. Clorox is widely known for their bleach products, but they have a range of other products that do not contain bleach. It's like how we call tissue paper Kleenex even if it's of another brand. I presume that you're asking about [Clorox] bleach, then to answer your question, bleach is sodium hypochlorite, a broad-spectrum disinfectant and fabric whitening agent.
Yes. The bottle itself is matter, as well as the air inside it.
First it must have "clorox" somewhere on the bottle. Many people call any brand of bleach or bleach looking bottle "clorox". Clorox is a brand of bleach just as is Purex, Roman, Javex, etc. Secondly, if the bottle has a rubber stopper that has clorox on it or a screw type lid that says clorox that doesn't make it a clorox bottle. The glass company that made the clorox bottles made bottles for other companies which the clorox stopper/lid may also fit. Thirdly, I assume that your bottle is clear like window glass. I would say 99% of clorox bottles are amber. I have 3 clear clorox bottles. A quart that was given to me. A quart that I paid $20, and a half-gallon that I paid $65. All are the screw top variety.
Depending on condition, a 16 oz. bottle is worth about $1 to $10, a 32 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, a 64 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, and a 1 gallon clorox bottle is worth about $5 to $20. Any clorox bottle under 16oz. can be worth $1 to $25 depending on rarity and condition.
Depending on condition, a 16 oz. bottle is worth about $1 to $10, a 32 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, a 64 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, and a 1 gallon clorox bottle is worth about $5 to $20. Any clorox bottle under 16oz. can be worth $1 to $25 depending on rarity and condition.
Clorox is the Manufacturer (the Company that makes the bleach). Bleach is the product (the actual bottle) that Clorox makes. Different company's make bleach also.
It would be a bad idea to store drinking water in a Clorox bottle. Don't cause confusion by putting something safe to drink in a poison container. It could lead to tasting/drinking actual Clorox by mistake.
yes, if it has been rinsed out. Clorox is a form of bleach, if the plant were watered using the bottle without rinsing it first it could result in the plant being burnt
Depending on condition, a 16 oz. bottle is worth about $1 to $10, a 32 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, a 64 oz. bottle is worth about $5 to $15, and a 1 gallon clorox bottle is worth about $5 to $20. Any clorox bottle under 16oz. can be worth $1 to $25 depending on rarity and condition.
No. The Clorox solution is now diluted by about 97%, maybe more. If you use it in the washer, it will be even more diluted by the water in the washer. It just will not work the way you want it to. next time you run into this problem, take the capful and throw it away.
If there was a different chemical in the spray bottle before you put the Clorox Bleach into it the molecules from the different chemical could have changed the composition of the Clorox Bleach.I Believe the Clorox is so caustic it is eating at the metal spring. I've put Clorox in spray bottles before and have rinsed them thoroughly. In time, weeks to months the spring seems to be dissolving and sprayer works more and more poorly until it stops working. Currently I'm using a clear sprayer and I can see the corrosion on the spring.If you know of an all plastic sprayer mechanism, please post it here. Thanks!
By definition, an empty bottle has nothing inside.
The "contents" are the item inside a bottle or container.
use Clorox 2 (blue bottle, orange lid), NOT Clorox bleach. put some in a cup, dip a tooth brush into it and then scrub them, this works really well on mine