

Also realize that most of the concerns about these cleaners causing corrosion only applies the bare aluminum. None of this stuff scares me from a corrosion standpoint. The glycol ether helps pull oily compounds into a water solution. The chloride in the ammonium chloride could be an issue, but the concentration is low and if you use it on a painted surface and rinse it off, I wouldn't worry about it. It is probably there to bind with the calcium and magnesium in the shower scum (hard water precipitate). It is sometimes administered to treat poisoning. EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) is often used to bind with heavy metals. Keep it away from your plane.ĮDTA is an organic acid complex, and the sodium salt means that it has been neutralized to the point that it is slightly alkaline. No - none of these are bleach, which is NaOCl or sodium hypochlorite. Not for use on acrylic, brass or marble surfaces.Īpplicable Material: Ceramic, Chrome, Fiberglass, Porcelain, Stainless Steel, Tile Won’t scratch surfaces leaves a brilliant shine. Kills common germs such as staphylococcus aureus and streptococcus pyogenes. "Foaming action thoroughly cleans, shines, disinfects and deodorizes -without scrubbing! Attacks soap scum, hard water stains, mildew and dirt. Let it sit for a minute before wiping off.

No draw backs and no elbow grease required. Leaves a clean bottom that smells good too:) I use the scott shop towels in a box to wipe it clean. Spray aerosol sprays out foam that sticks (no drips) and cuts the scum off the bottom. I dont know why this stuff works, but it does.
