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Homemade laundry detergent is very simple to make and works extremely well. There are only four ingredients. These ingredients are a bar of soap, water, Borax, and Washing Soda.
There WAS no laundry detergent in 1910. To wash your clothes, you used flakes of soap (and you probably made the flakes by grating a hard bar of soap). This did a poor job. In 1933, Dreft detergent was marketed for the first time (a detergent, not a soap) but it did not work well on heavy stains. In 1943, Tide detergent entered the market- and is still around- improved a reported 21 times since then. But in 1910, drag out the soap and the grater.
Not exactly. It's a low foam, light detergent more intended for delicate washing. However, any detergent can be used in an HE washing machine. What's happening when your HE machine foams over is a simple matter of over-activivation of the detergent that is generally inhibited by a poly-silicate in the detergent. You, however, can accomplish the same feat by a simple introduction of good old fashioned soap. Just a few shaves of your favorite bar of bar soap will keep the suds down and ensure that your HE washer can use any detergent.
all soaps are alkaline, use a detergent. you didn't say what it was for, but for handwashing Dove and Zest brands of bar "soap" are good detergents in bar form. There are many others. Ivory brand is a soap, not a detergent, but it is advertised for purity so it should have negligible unreacted lye; but its still slightly alkaline.
You cannot just use the word Soap. You need to narrow this down a bit more. Detergent can be classified as a Soap. In this instance, it would be considered irreversibleble. Normal bar soap is also irreversibleble. Indian soap is reversible because of the properties it is made of....
Homemade laundry detergent is very simple to make and works extremely well. There are only four ingredients. These ingredients are a bar of soap, water, Borax, and Washing Soda.
There WAS no laundry detergent in 1910. To wash your clothes, you used flakes of soap (and you probably made the flakes by grating a hard bar of soap). This did a poor job. In 1933, Dreft detergent was marketed for the first time (a detergent, not a soap) but it did not work well on heavy stains. In 1943, Tide detergent entered the market- and is still around- improved a reported 21 times since then. But in 1910, drag out the soap and the grater.
Not exactly. It's a low foam, light detergent more intended for delicate washing. However, any detergent can be used in an HE washing machine. What's happening when your HE machine foams over is a simple matter of over-activivation of the detergent that is generally inhibited by a poly-silicate in the detergent. You, however, can accomplish the same feat by a simple introduction of good old fashioned soap. Just a few shaves of your favorite bar of bar soap will keep the suds down and ensure that your HE washer can use any detergent.
all soaps are alkaline, use a detergent. you didn't say what it was for, but for handwashing Dove and Zest brands of bar "soap" are good detergents in bar form. There are many others. Ivory brand is a soap, not a detergent, but it is advertised for purity so it should have negligible unreacted lye; but its still slightly alkaline.
Causes of laundry is Bar,soap,soab,Laundry Gloves,pale,cub,Washing Machine, or many others That's all bye xD.....
Bar soap is the best for that, not smelly soap because that will make it worse.
"Vegan" is NOT necessarily Kosher. "Vegan" products are NOT necessarily kosher, nor are all kosher pareve products "vegan" (nor should they be). Hand soap and laundry soap do not need to be certified kosher, although some observant families might insist that they are. Dish-washing liquid and automatic dishwasher detergent do.
You cannot just use the word Soap. You need to narrow this down a bit more. Detergent can be classified as a Soap. In this instance, it would be considered irreversibleble. Normal bar soap is also irreversibleble. Indian soap is reversible because of the properties it is made of....
Depending on the type of detergent each one has a different function, also depending on what you are washing or cleaning. You wouldn't take a shower/bath with out soap would you? Whether you prefer bar soap, liquid soap, body wash, we use soap to help us clean, deodorize, and sanitize our bodies. The same holds true with most detergents, they help clean the item you are washing, whether it is laundry or dishes, or whatever. Some detergents help soften material with fabric softeners, some detergents leave a pleasing smell on the item(s) being washed, while others sanitize and disinfect. The main reason or function of any detergent is to help clean.
Soap shaped as bar
What do you mean by body soap? Soap that is in bar form, or soap that in a bottle like body wash? Bar soap could pick up sand and grit that might scratch the finish. Body wash is a mild abrasive but I have never heard of anybody using it for washing a car but I assume that a slight clouding of the clear coat is possible. If you have access to dish soap (detergent) it is the best improvised automotive soap.
Solvent oil like gasoline or diesel oil can do the job. Warm water with bar soap or detergent can also do but at slower rate.