Jim Pemberton
MB Exclusive.
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2006
- Messages
- 12,606
- Name
- Jim Pemberton
If you're over 60, you now have an earworm that you might have difficulty removing. (I understand chewing gum helps....I'm not sure why)
My apologies
To my point:
How many are noticing that they are cleaning more wool carpet? I brought this up a few months ago, and since that time, I'm receiving more calls, texts, and DMs about it.
I don't see it becoming the staple (no pun intended) for wall to wall cleaning in the US as it tends to me in the UK and Oceania, but it is showing up more and more in homes and businesses nationwide.
In the past 20 years or so our industry has migrated upward to prespray products between 11 and 12, and even VLM products in that pH range. The use of those types of products are, to say the least, not safe for this fiber. I think we'd all agree that a pH of that high is not nearly safe for wool, even if you attempt to neutralize it with an acidic rinse after you apply it.
What are you seeing, and if you feel up to confession, what are you doing when you clean wool?
My apologies
To my point:
How many are noticing that they are cleaning more wool carpet? I brought this up a few months ago, and since that time, I'm receiving more calls, texts, and DMs about it.
I don't see it becoming the staple (no pun intended) for wall to wall cleaning in the US as it tends to me in the UK and Oceania, but it is showing up more and more in homes and businesses nationwide.
In the past 20 years or so our industry has migrated upward to prespray products between 11 and 12, and even VLM products in that pH range. The use of those types of products are, to say the least, not safe for this fiber. I think we'd all agree that a pH of that high is not nearly safe for wool, even if you attempt to neutralize it with an acidic rinse after you apply it.
What are you seeing, and if you feel up to confession, what are you doing when you clean wool?