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*paul_moss

  • Posts: 2961
Wool safe
« on: July 03, 2008, 02:31:31 pm »
Any of the guys who have done the wool safe approved trainning course tell me what is the highest ph level a chemical should be for cleaning wool carpets. ( the approved wool safe guide level).
I went to look at a customers white wool carpet that has browning in a number of places, what have you used to try and clean it I ask, out comes a 4 litre container of extraction fluid made by Rug Doctor. It has very little info on it as to the make up of the chemicals or a ph reading, however it has the wool safe approved symbol on it.
I did a ph test on it and it was around 11.5, the customer has used it to the dilution level but it still has caused the browning marks.
I phoned Rug doctor at the customers as the bottle also had a phone number on it, I spoke to a young lady who told me the customer had caused the problem as she had used it as a spotter and not with the rug doctor machine.When I told her that the wool safe logo approves the chemicals prperties and not the machine she then put me onto their onsite chemist  ;D He started off very brave until I told him that I have just done a ph test and the level was in my oppinion too high to be wool safe, I asked him if he could tell the chemicals make up and if it had a buffer in it, at this point he refused to comment and passed me back to customer services who have asked for the product to be returned.
Of course I have told the customer to take photos of the carpet and photos of the container labels along with keeping half of the chemical in a sealed ontainer and send ing the other half back to rug doctor.
I await the responce but I am concerned regarding the actual wool safe logo.

Any one expand on this?
Paul Moss  MBICSc
www.mosscleaning.co.uk
REMOVED FOR POSTING OFFENSIVE MATERIAL

davep

  • Posts: 2589

John Kelly

  • Posts: 4461
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #2 on: July 03, 2008, 03:05:45 pm »
Opened a can of worms there Paul. Costs big bucks to have a product "Woolsafe" approved. Quite possibly could be perfectly safe when used in an extraction machine, even a Rug Doctor but diluted and applied to the carpet to remove a stain could have caused over wetting and subsequent browning.

terryyy100

  • Posts: 281
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #3 on: July 03, 2008, 03:29:07 pm »
Paul has she not just over wet the carpet mate, regards terry

The WoolSafe Organisation

  • Posts: 22
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #4 on: July 03, 2008, 04:05:09 pm »
Lots of issues to clear up here!
1. The Rug Doctor Carpet Detergent is, and has been WoolSafe approved for over 10 years. During this period we never detected a pH higher than 9.8 in the concentrate. It was 9.2 at the last annual re-evaluation. What the customer did to her bottle to make it a 100 times this alkaline is a mistery to me.
The product is not buffered, correctly diluted (17ml/l) it should not cause any problems on wool carpets. Very high pH can cause yellowing and in extreme cases fibre degradation on wool carpets. It does not seem to be the case here, the browning most probably comes from the backing which got overwetted during prolonged cleaning.

2. No Vanish products have WoolSafe approval.
3. Some 1001 products are approved, the new TroubleShooter Ultra is NOT.

4. WoolSafe approval does not cost "big bucks". It is the chemical which is approved, not the machine -- if anyone ever tells you their "system" is approved, please tell us so our lawyers can get big bucks off them. We regularly check the chemicals, but cannot monitor how customers are storing or using them.

Dr Agnes Zsednai
The WoolSafe Organisation

Neil Grainger

  • Posts: 1273
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #5 on: July 03, 2008, 04:44:19 pm »
Hi

I have just tested some of their detergent that comes from asda with the hire machine and it has a ph level of over 11ph.

This is really interesting.

Woolsafe, have you seen the damage that 1001 does to carpets, something very strange about approving these products becasue they are leathal in the wrong hands. The wrong hads being the public which they are aimed at and you guys approve it.

Gerry Styles

  • Posts: 558
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #6 on: July 03, 2008, 04:51:19 pm »
Just looked on rug doctor website. Cant find any mention of woolsafe & msds do not state ph
Premier Klean Limited

Doug Holloway

  • Posts: 3917
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #7 on: July 03, 2008, 05:00:26 pm »
Hi Guys

Something is not right here.

Either Paul can't read pH, unlikely.

The customer has changed the product, unlikely.

The product supplied is a different spec to the one tested, possible.

QC failure to detect manufacturing problem, possible.

It would be interesting to see if any random testing is carried out by Woolsafe or if samples supplied are accepted as being representative of product.

Cheers

Doug

*paul_moss

  • Posts: 2961
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #8 on: July 03, 2008, 05:14:17 pm »
Did not get the impression of over wetting as it was used as a spotter and not soaked in with bucket fulls also the carpet was not hessian backed. I would say by looking at the tinge/stain ( dependant on the wool and dyes used it may look yellow or brown) formulation it was C B from high ph, but that can only be my opinion as cannot be proved either way after the fact.

I like others come across this problem alot with similar products especially the oxidisers,.

To Woolsafe. WHy if you endorse such products  not demand that the product should be labeled to state the ph level along with the actual chemical break down ( ingredients).

Also Woolsafe could  you answer the question regarding wool safe ph levels both at alkaline state  and acidic please.
Paul Moss  MBICSc
www.mosscleaning.co.uk
REMOVED FOR POSTING OFFENSIVE MATERIAL

roger underhill

  • Posts: 95
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #9 on: July 03, 2008, 05:43:01 pm »
I cant believe 1001 is a woolsafe product, the residue left in the carpets with regular use makes cleaning and rinsing out a nightmare.
I will be interested to hear what woolsafe have further to say about this subject.
Family business founded in 1985

davep

  • Posts: 2589
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #10 on: July 03, 2008, 06:08:22 pm »
True, the times i have tackled a stain where Vanish or 1001 has been used  :-X

Good adverts and marketing but thats about it  ::)

Kev Loomes

  • Posts: 1353
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #11 on: July 03, 2008, 07:39:44 pm »
Looks like Woolsafe have 'No Comment'  ???

Shaun_Ashmore

  • Posts: 11382
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #12 on: July 03, 2008, 08:04:46 pm »
I guess that Woolsafe may work office hours so you won't get an answer until tomorrow, but let's give them a chance to answer without jumping on them.

Unless we (Paul) bring this to Woolsafe's attention then they won't know about it but it definately does need addressing. In the Uk we tend to have largely wool content carpets in the Us mainly man made, perhaps some of the Us products have come over here.

Woolsafe could you tell us how much it is to have a 'product' with a woolsafe logo?

Shaun

Len Gribble

  • Posts: 5106
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #13 on: July 03, 2008, 09:02:01 pm »
WS Dr it’s got your logo on thought that was worth protecting, assuming that that you done the test today what the life expectancy of the product am sure you tested for that and recommend. :-*


Read somewhere a long time ago temperature plays tricks, so pure clean should be ok on wool  ::)

Paul

I take it that you used a ph meter, was it calibrated did you test on say tap water first. Don’t know why I asked that silly question sorry. ;)

Doug

Get you Bunsen burner going ;)

Neil

Golden egg :D

Shaun

If you have to ask you cant afford it :o

Len
Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any other. (Sidcup Kent)

Shaun_Ashmore

  • Posts: 11382
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #14 on: July 03, 2008, 09:27:08 pm »
poor Yorkshire lad ;D

Shaun

Len Gribble

  • Posts: 5106
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #15 on: July 03, 2008, 09:35:44 pm »
Shaun

Is that why you are in my area for two weeks? >:(

Len
Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any other. (Sidcup Kent)

The WoolSafe Organisation

  • Posts: 22
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #16 on: July 04, 2008, 12:24:16 pm »
Thanks Shaun, we do work office hours. Also, I said what I could on the basis of the information I had yesterday and wanted to do more investigation before jumping in with another reply.

We do not have an ASDA near us, but I went to Focus last night, which hires out these machines. There were various Rug Doctor chemicals on display. Only the Carpet Detergent had the WoolSafe Mark on. I bought a (1 litre) bottle and in the test this morning it behaved like the sample we got before (pH=9.4, not buffered). So we still do not know what has gone wrong with the bottles you got. Can you send us some with a copy of the label so we can follow it up? How old was it? The top usually has a long number on which starts with the year of manufacture. We have last year’s sample in archive – it did not change. These chemicals should have a shelf life of a few years provided they are not exposed to extreme temperatures.

Generally WoolSafe does not obtain samples from the market (though we have the right to do so in cases of complaint). The manufacturer is obliged under the terms of their licence to supply us with a representative sample from the most recent production, and we believe they do that. It is also in their interest to have the product independently tested to avoid complaints.

Regarding the label: professional products usually have the pH on; but can you expect the average consumer to know what it means? Listing the ingredients is not possible for fear of copying.

Safe pH is not as easy as giving you a number, Paul. We spend a lot of time on this topic at our training course. Basically, wool is not damaged by acids, but a cleaner would not want to handle anything below 2. Alkalis do damage wool on long contact. Above 11 is certainly not a good idea, below that it depends on the buffering, i.e. how easy it is to change. That is why we do a separate test for it. pH 10.5 could be safe if just one drop of acid brings it down. But you can have a product with pH 8 which we reject if buffered, because it can cause colour bleeding.

Neil says "Woolsafe, have you seen the damage that 1001 does to carpets, something very strange about approving these products becasue they are leathal in the wrong hands. The wrong hads being the public which they are aimed at and you guys approve it. "

There are a lot of other things which are lethal in the wrong hands and we cannot stand behind everyone.
Seriously, I do take your point, but we have to draw the line somewhere. There are an awful lot of products out there which would cause damage even in the right hands! 1001 does not have any bleaching or otherwise damaging agents in it and is safe if used correctly. We know about the residue, it is not difficult to rinse out when fresh, but can be a real problem if left – and of course that is when you see it.

Shaun: First approval of 1 product is about £1000, annual cost from second year around £600. With multiple products the “per product” rate goes down. It is not a lot for a healthy company. I can send you all the info if you wish, just drop me a line (agnes@woolsafe.org).

Have a good weekend everyone!
Ágnes

Ken Wainwright

  • Posts: 2107
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #17 on: July 04, 2008, 02:03:15 pm »
As a trained carpet inspector, I have learnt that you cannot make a diagnosis from afar. You really don't know until your investigations have been completed, so it is important not to pre-judge.

Having said that, my first thought was as brought up by Len, has the pH meter been recalibrated recently, both for neutral and acid or alkali? Has the pH of the carpet been tested? Is the brown appearance due to the product(s), primary or secondary backing or adhesives?  My gut feeling is that the problem is more likely to be due to inappropriate technique/overwetting rather than being product related, but there I go pre-judging again :(

Safe and happy cleaning :)
Ken
Veni, vidi vici, Vaxi
I came, I saw, I conquered, I cleaned up!

Barry Livingstone

  • Posts: 646
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #18 on: July 04, 2008, 02:43:37 pm »
There are a lot of other things which are lethal in the wrong hands and we cannot stand behind everyone.
Seriously, I do take your point, but we have to draw the line somewhere. There are an awful lot of products out there which would cause damage even in the right hands! 1001 does not have any bleaching or otherwise damaging agents in it and is safe if used correctly. We know about the residue, it is not difficult to rinse out when fresh, but can be a real problem if left – and of course that is when you see it.

Ágnes

Right did i just read that correctly they "no about the residue" !!!!! Is it not the RESIDUE thats causs US the problem and the customer cos a BIG black stain on the carpet that FOAMS UP as soon as wee touch it makes the carpet dirtier in the first place. sorry but 1001 is a carpet cleaners nitemare..... ita all about big brother and big corporations making money out of joe bloggs....sorry but the product is carp (1001)

Woolsafe......you make us laugh...
Carpet, Upholstery cleaning & hard floor cleaning.
                     Fife, perth and tayside.

Neil Grainger

  • Posts: 1273
Re: Wool safe
« Reply #19 on: July 04, 2008, 03:19:14 pm »
To remove the residue should all Joe public have a extraction machine, because without one it is impossible to remove the residue in total.

This stuff is leathal and you guys support it, That is very odd in my mind.

Any thanks for coming back to us about it, many comapnies would just hide away.