Woolite to water ratio

Nyquil

Well-known member
Got a couple of spots to clean on the cloth. What ratio of woolite to distilled is recommended?
 
This is what I do, vacuum first really good.
Take one of the wifes blue/green dish cloths', it's kind of a thick one, saturate it, ring it out slightly,
then fold it in half, it's maybe 12" x 12" overall, pour about the size of a half dollar of woolite directly on the cloth,
I'm quick at this now,
I also pour directly on the cloth same amount of the Lysol multi-surface, it would be the smelly type at the time chosen,
mash all together quick, lightly ring again,
move quickly to the table with folded in 1/4's, hit the spots that may need the attention first,
then do the whole table in 1/4's, using each of the different folds for each 1/4 of the table.
Cloth gets equally wet, not saturated, move quick and evenly, hit the rails at the same time.
Do I recommend this? No.
Been doing this for a couple three years now,, it's Gorina 2000, with the M carom cloth on the rails, everything seems to be fine.
I've been told that every cleaning tightens it a little.
Do not use dish cloth again without it being washed in the laundry machine.
 
No need. Use Brakleen in the green can. It contains the same chemicals used in dry cleaning so it cleans and evaporates quickly. Spray some on a microfiber cloth (careful not to get overspray on a painted surface) and dab the cloth until the stain is removed. I've had VERY good success using this on my Simonis over the years.
 
No need. Use Brakleen in the green can. It contains the same chemicals used in dry cleaning so it cleans and evaporates quickly. Spray some on a microfiber cloth (careful not to get overspray on a painted surface) and dab the cloth until the stain is removed. I've had VERY good success using this on my Simonis over the years.
you don't use it on the cushions do you?
 
No need. Use Brakleen in the green can. It contains the same chemicals used in dry cleaning so it cleans and evaporates quickly. Spray some on a microfiber cloth (careful not to get overspray on a painted surface) and dab the cloth until the stain is removed. I've had VERY good success using this on my Simonis over the years.
Just checked CRC's site. Green can stuff is 90% acetone. The red can is the one with dry-cleaning fluid(contains chlorine) in it. From what i've seen both work ok. Non-chlorine would probably be easier on the cloth/dye.
 
The red can could possibly discolor the cloth. I've had success using the green (non-chlorine). It's my understanding the dry cleaning chemical is in both.
 
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