My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find cleaning advice from other Mumsnetters on our Housekeeping forum.

Housekeeping

Using bleach in the toilet - do people actually do this?

40 replies

EyepatchOfTravis · 03/04/2017 20:57

Genuine question. I've always been a bit wary of using bleach (I suffer from a type of OCD where I get very anxious around certain chemicals), so have always used toilet cleaners that aren't bleach based. However, my toilet is looking pretty stained and there's lime scale too and I'm thinking that actually, a bleach based product may be a good idea for a while. However, I was looking at the bleach toilet cleaners today and the bottles of all of them (from super duper extra lime scale removal ones to bog standard thick bleach) say you should use protective gloves, clothing and eye protection, which given my anxiety around bleach has put me into a bit of a tailspin. Do people actually change into protective gear and don goggles and rubber gloves? I just assumed you picked up the bottle and squirted it round the rim with minimum fuss...

OP posts:
Report
avamiah · 04/04/2017 01:38

e1y1,
I know it's ridiculous.😫.
My friend( who does not have children)said she does the Bleaching clean in her underwear . 😮
Lucky for you I said.
If I walked around the house cleaning toilets and the kitchen in my bra and big knickers I could guarantee their would be a knock at the door with a delivery from Amazon.😬

Report
e1y1 · 04/04/2017 01:51
Grin
Report
scoobydoo1971 · 04/04/2017 02:10

Whether you use bleach or not, be careful not to use it alongside other cleaning products as there can be a chemical reaction that can be harmful to your toilet, and your lungs and skin. For example, mixing bleach and vinegar gives you chlorine...stingy eyes, burning skin, respiratory health issues. My poor late father was once seen running wildly through our cold Victorian house clutching his nether regions. Turns out my mothers over-zealous cleaning had left a rather toxic combination of chemical warfare on the toilet block under the rim...burned him somewhere you would rather not put a plaster during a little visit...

Report
celeste84 · 04/04/2017 08:18

Its just the bleach companies way of legally covering themselves if anyone hurts themselves with the bleach. In the real world not much can wrong if you are squirting the bleach around the rim. The only things getting harmed by the bleach is the germs and nasties hiding under the rim of my loo Grin I don't even wear gloves with it. I'm not going to physically touch the bleach but i will of course wash my hands after as you would after lifting the toilet seat, touching the flush handle, etc. One thing though is this advice of the dangers of bleach should hit home how dangerous it is to leave around the home in reach of little hands. I hate to think of a child playing with it and getting it in their eyes. Thats why it always annoys me when i see people leaving a bleach bottle next o the loo within reach of children Angry

Report
PickAChew · 04/04/2017 21:53

Hazy memories of chemistry lessons about 30 years ago lead me to believe that this is because limescale is calcium related, and coke contains phosphoric acid. I think phosphorous is a 'stronger' alkali metal than calcium. Is this true, readers?

Hopefully someone has already picked this up, but your memories are very hazy indeed!

It's a simple acid base reaction. Limescale is calcium carbonate (same stuff as limestone, chalk and rennies!)
Acid + carbonate = salt + water + carbon dioxide, which is why you get lots of fizz if you squirt vinegar onto limescale.

I tried the coke trick, when I had a flat half bottle to dispose of. It just stained it all even browner. I've given up on the black harpic because it's just not as good as it used to be and the smell gives me a headache. That's why I just periodically bleach the fucker, now! It's never looked better, particularly since I no longer have to manually wipe away the disgusting biofilm that the bog brush and harpic would never touch, in a particularly awkwardly angled bit of the bowl.

Report
PickAChew · 04/04/2017 21:55

Spirit of salt is hydrochloric acid. That's definitely the nuclear option (though, incidentally, the acid you have in your stomach!)

Report
EyepatchOfTravis · 05/04/2017 17:14

Thanks everyone Smile

OP posts:
Report
cuddlebug · 07/04/2017 10:51

I never use bleach. I just use milton (cheaper brand in Poundland it smells like chlorine).

Report
Medeci · 07/04/2017 19:23

I never use bleach in the toilet since we had our new bathroom installed . The cleaning instructions for the new toilet said not to use bleach as it would take the shine off and make the surface more porous and harder to clean.
So just use any toilet cleaner without bleach and it still looks like new.

Report
rabbit123 · 08/04/2017 11:05

No bleach in this house, it's pointless stuff. Whilst bleach is a good bacteria killer, there is no cleaning agent in it. To get the most out of bleach, you need to wash the surface first and then bleach it. Also it's really easily desensitised so the smallest things can render it totally useless.

For the toilet, I use bog standard toilet duck. Leave it to sit over night and then scrub round with the loo brush in the morning and flush away

Report
kel1493 · 08/04/2017 11:08

I just squirt it round and pour a bit into the bottom as well. I also pour it down the plugs and things like that.
I can't stand rubber gloves, I literally only use them for cleaning the toilet.

Report
muttrat · 08/04/2017 11:12

I use black harpic. I scoop most of the water out, put the harpic in and leave for an hour. Voila

Report
specialsubject · 11/04/2017 14:27

No bleach down the bog in this house due to septic tank and no one has died. The fish will thank you not to use it.

As above,white vinegar ( from wilkinsons, pound a bottle) on the limescale, ideally with the water sponged out first. Then rubber gloves and scrub after a while.

Less harmful for you as well.

Report
dontcallmelen · 11/04/2017 17:04

Yy harpic in the black bottle, shifts limescale like nothing else brilliant stuff.

Report
EineKleine · 11/04/2017 23:08

I just squirt it round but for limescale use the black bottle cleaner, which is not bleach based. It works well but seems to smell of urine to me, so I don't use it all the time.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.