Montreal Gazette

GET TOUGH ON STAINS

Powerful cleaners help lift caked-on deposits and keep them at bay

- JEANNE HUBER

A how-to guru advises a readers on removing a stubborn stain from a fibreglass shower floor.

Q My fibreglass shower pan has a stain, presumably from hard water, that I cannot remove. The tile and glass for the shower are new, but the pan is original — 22 years old. I have tried commercial cleaners, a mixture of vinegar and Dawn detergent, and a Magic Eraser. But these were no help. We have a well and septic. Could you suggest something?

A Hard water — meaning well or municipal water laden with dissolved minerals such as calcium and magnesium — leads to cleaning woes in a shower because the minerals are left behind as the water evaporates. When this happens over and over, the buildup is like caked-on rock. It’s difficult to remove with just ordinary cleaning, especially when the underlying surface is easy to scratch, as it is with a fibreglass shower floor. Anything abrasive enough to scrub away the deposits would also damage the surface.

The solution is to do chemical battle with the deposits so they dissolve. The crusty stains are alkaline, so to dissolve them, you apply an acid. Using vinegar mixed with hand dishwashin­g liquid was a smart approach because vinegar is acidic and dish detergent is a surfactant — a cleaner that helps lift deposits and keeps them from reattachin­g to the surface.

But since it didn’t work, you need something more powerful.

Acids used for stain and mineral removal range from mild to powerful. Vinegar (acetic acid) and lemon juice (citric acid) are at the mild- and low-toxicity end of the scale, which is why they show up so often in recommenda­tions for homemade, eco-friendly cleaning products. In heavy-duty, commercial­ly prepared cleaning products, you’re more likely to find more powerful ingredient­s such as hydrochlor­ic acid, hydrofluor­ic acid, oxalic acid, sodium hypochlori­te and sulphuric acid. These are poisonous and carry scary warning labels. That said, these products can sometimes be used safely when less powerful cleaners don’t work. But it’s critical to choose an appropriat­e cleaner and to read and follow the safety informatio­n on the label.

Before you resort to cleaners with warning labels and special precaution­s, you might try boosting the cleaning power of vinegar by mixing it with cream of tartar to make a paste. Cream of tartar is a byproduct of making wine and grape juice.

When mixed with a liquid, it makes the liquid more acidic, plus it works as a mild scrubbing agent. Grocery stores sell it in little jars in the spice section. An old toothbrush might work well as a scrubbing tool, because the stains on your shower floor appear to be limited to a small area. A brush probably would reach into the texture better than a scrub pad. Let it sit for a bit before you rinse it away. If the stain lessens, repeat.

If this homemade cleaning paste doesn’t lighten the stain, try a marine cleaner that contains oxalic acid and is formulated to work on fibreglass, such as FSR ($22.99 from Amazon.ca) or Star Brite Ultimate Fiberglass Stain Remover ($44.70 on Amazon). Manufactur­ers of both products state that these can be used to clean fibreglass showers. These products have several characteri­stics that make them ideal for that purpose, although boat-cleaning is the primary focus.

A gel consistenc­y helps them stick to the sides of boats. This also means they ’ll stick to a floor rather than disappear instantly down the drain. They’re formulated to be non-abrasive, so they shouldn’t scratch the gel coat on fibreglass boats — or a shower floor.

The oxalic acid is also particular­ly effective at eating into mineral deposits, lifting rust and erasing tannin stains. Boat hulls can get stained because lake water contains leaves that leach out tannins.

Garden soil rich in compost also contains tannins from decomposin­g twigs and leaves. So if the stains on your floor consist partly of buildup from dirt that’s been tracked in, tannin removal might be what you need, too.

In a concentrat­ed form, oxalic acid is powerful and toxic. But there is less concentrat­ion in these cleaners, and you shouldn’t need much to treat the stained areas on your shower floor. Diluted with plenty of rinse water, the cleaners shouldn’t cause a problem with your septic system.

There is another reason to use plenty of rinse water. Products formulated for use on boat hulls need to cling to the surface while they work. So, if you don’t rinse thoroughly, some of the cleaner could be left on the shower floor and make it slippery, according to Star Brite spokesman Derick Cote.

Before you apply a cleaner to the stains, which are at the centre of your shower floor, test the product in a small area toward the side of the floor to make sure it doesn’t damage the surface or add a stain colour of its own.

 ??  ?? A reader wants to get rid of hard water stains in a fibreglass shower pan. The problem is that anything abrasive enough also damages the surface.
A reader wants to get rid of hard water stains in a fibreglass shower pan. The problem is that anything abrasive enough also damages the surface.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada