I own a transportation/limo company in California and have been looking for natural DIY cleaner alternatives. Everything in the store is limited 1 per customer or sold out. Great idea. I shared it and hope more people make their own.
2:46 1/3cup water, 1/3cup 3% hydrogen peroxide (minimum, 0.5%, chemical & redisidue free), drip wipe (e.g. bamboo wipes). Test wipe if it burns or stings your skin then dilute it.
I got to thinking the same thing, but I was watching another youtuber who cooks and her motto is: MY HOUSE MY WAY...YOUR HOUSE YOUR WAY...esp. if they did not ask for tips. Maybe this lady will change it up one day or keep doing it the way she likes - oh well, we all have our quirks about things and she probably likes those particular towels better - which is fine.
I have done something similar to this using an empty antibacterial wipes container that is about 12” tall & 4” in diameter. I used paper towels and just poured the liquid on them from the top. The wicking action of the paper towels did a good job of dispersing the hydrogen peroxide & water solution. I cut the roll of paper towels to fit the container, but they could be folded or just stuffed into the container depending on personal preference.
Thanks for sharing this. Those lysol wipes are so poisonous and now that they're in such high demand, I've heard of some places selling them for as much as $60 per can! Crazy when hydrogen peroxide is a couple bucks for a huge bottle
I bought 12% pharmacy grade and dilute to 3%. Researching I found that 3% has many stabilizers in it as HP is very unstable and will turn to water in a short time. 12% doesn't so be prepared to use it rather quickly after dilution w/ distilled water.
Hi! You can also use wet mop refills and add your own disinfectants to the already wet ones or use the dry ones and add your own mix in a reused container from old wipes. That kind of material holds up far better than paper towels. Also, you can get 15 in a pack at the dollar tree. There is other cloth like wipes of a similar material there and these can be cut to size and used the same way.
Hello, I have asthma and a heart condition, it has been hard trying to find cleaning products so I feel lucky that I came across your Chanel, I just subscribed ❤️ Thank you for such valuable information. Can I use the kitchen towels from Costco istead of those wipes? Thank you in advance, God bless.
hi! just subscribed because of the disinfectant wipes. question- any alternative to the dry wipes that is as effective? & is it ok to put the wipes on a metal canister? thanks
I've used Hydrogen Peroxide to get rid of skin cancer. It does a good job too. I would suggest that you rinse the area with water after your done though to prevent any kind of burning sensation.
I noticed that the lysol wipes were much more drier meaning it would take more wipes to clean the same surface. My hands feel numb and it feels like the chemicals is penetrating my arteries and stuff (highly concerned about this). I wish i just did this because i can decide how wet are my wipes and would last long.
I’m wondering if this is a good option right now since isopropyl alcohol is so scarce. Is there a reason why we can’t just pour the solution over the stack of wipes in the container rather than soaking each one individually?
No this is not going to work disinffecting areas of the house. You need a good ammount of time to do that and oxygen evaporates over that period of tume when exposed to air, Its good for disinffecting like hands, fruits and veggies as the virus doesnt work well with food. Bleach solution or powder is the best form for disinfecting areas. Stop making claims that no one knows about, plus 3% should not be dilluted with water that much
Stephen That’s not true - where is the research to support your statement? I’ve posted multiple links that hydrogen peroxide is virucidal, etc and far better tested than the QUATS in conventional wipes.
@@AlisonMorrow no need to research, just check the chemical composition of its substance and its valie. Its just typically oxygenated water, while yes oxygen is a good form to kills virus and bacteria for skin, fruits, plants and when cautious and the right ammount internally, it doesnt act well on solid surface . Adding more water to a 3% solution would lessen its strength. The virus have protein fatty lipids, imagine an h202 cleaning an oily countertop? I would rather spray it with 3% solution, wait for 2 mins then wipe it as friction, Then repeat. Other than just making straight wipes out of it.
Hydrogen Peroxide, even with stabilizers, would decompose to oxygen and water pretty readily under these storage conditions. These wipes would need to be used within a day or two.
I agree, this is a bit sketchy for having wipes on hand. I'd maybe have the dry wipes and have the H202 on hand in the spray type bottle they now come in and refill with the old standard. Also I've never gotten burned by H202 @ 3% but each to their experience.
@@AlisonMorrow If you pour the solution over the top of the wipes in the plastic container all the wipes will absorb the solution. I do it all the time with alcohol solution. It's common sense really! EXAMPLE: Fill a small bowl with water. Place the very tip of one corner of a paper towel in the water in the bowl. In just a little bit the whole paper towel will have absorbed the water uniformly.....no brainer!
If you’re interested in making your own toxic free wipes, which are also better at sanitizing and killing viruses than Lysol and Clorox wipes, check it out. I’ve since learned that if you want to dilute your hydrogen peroxide, which is not necessary, use distilled, filtered or reverse osmosis water and avoid tap water if possible.
This is great, thanks. I saw a DIY hack awhile ago where they took one of the round containers and fit in a whole roll of paper towels and then added the solution. I bet that would work great too but you would need one of those old Clorox Wipes containers... Is this what you are using to wipe down your groceries, etc? I'm super challenged by that right now and think I might set something up in the back of my car/trunk to place my groceries in and then clean them on the way out? Ugh. So time consuming...
From the CDC: Hydrogen peroxide is active against a wide range of microorganisms, including bacteria, yeasts, fungi, viruses, and spores 78, 654. A 0.5% accelerated hydrogen peroxide demonstrated bactericidal and virucidal activity in 1 minute and mycobactericidal and fungicidal activity in 5 minutes 656. Bactericidal effectiveness and stability of hydrogen peroxide in urine has been demonstrated against a variety of health-care-associated pathogens; organisms with high cellular catalase activity (e.g., S. aureus, S. marcescens, and Proteus mirabilis) required 30-60 minutes of exposure to 0.6% hydrogen peroxide for a 108 reduction in cell counts, whereas organisms with lower catalase activity (e.g., E. coli, Streptococcus species, and Pseudomonas species) required only 15 minutes’ exposure 657. In an investigation of 3%, 10%, and 15% hydrogen peroxide for reducing spacecraft bacterial populations, a complete kill of 106 spores (i.e., Bacillus species) occurred with a 10% concentration and a 60-minute exposure time. A 3% concentration for 150 minutes killed 106 spores in six of seven exposure trials 658. A 10% hydrogen peroxide solution resulted in a 103 decrease in B. atrophaeus spores, and a ≥105 decrease when tested against 13 other pathogens in 30 minutes at 20°C 659, 660. A 3.0% hydrogen peroxide solution was ineffective against VRE after 3 and 10 minutes exposure times 661 and caused only a 2-log10 reduction in the number of Acanthamoeba cysts in approximately 2 hours 662. A 7% stabilized hydrogen peroxide proved to be sporicidal (6 hours of exposure), mycobactericidal (20 minutes), fungicidal (5 minutes) at full strength, virucidal (5 minutes) and bactericidal (3 minutes) at a 1:16 dilution when a quantitative carrier test was used 655. The 7% solution of hydrogen peroxide, tested after 14 days of stress (in the form of germ-loaded carriers and respiratory therapy equipment), was sporicidal (>7 log10 reduction in 6 hours), mycobactericidal (>6.5 log10 reduction in 25 minutes), fungicidal (>5 log10 reduction in 20 minutes), bactericidal (>6 log10 reduction in 5 minutes) and virucidal (5 log10 reduction in 5 minutes) 663. Synergistic sporicidal effects were observed when spores were exposed to a combination of hydrogen peroxide (5.9%-23.6%) and peracetic acid 664. Other studies demonstrated the antiviral activity of hydrogen peroxide against rhinovirus 665. The time required for inactivating three serotypes of rhinovirus using a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution was 6-8 minutes; this time increased with decreasing concentrations (18-20 minutes at 1.5%, 50-60 minutes at 0.75%).
Alison Morrow Thank you so much for the quick response! I can't believe the percentage of ppl writing comments to question your obviously thorough research! Thank you so much for taking the time to share with us 🤗
Yes, Carla, it very well could become contaminated by her own hands. If she's going to do it the hard way, at least put gloves on. This is why the paper towel roll is the best method.
charisma Luv EXACTLY! Many don’t know that you’ll supposed to wear gloves when USING antibacterial wipes or thoroughly wash your hands after using them without gloves.
Could you just pour a certain amount of H202 into the moist wipe box instead of the dip and ring out each one process? I would think that they would absorb all of the H2O2.
How long do the wipes last in the container? Also, I see that hydrogen peroxide kills a whole lot of things but I'm not sure if it kills the Coronavirus. Does it? And if it does, at what percent? 3%, the type you usually see in the store? Also, I know that the surface has to remain wet for a certain amount of time to disinfect. How long does it has to remain wet to be effective? Last question. Do you have to wash down the surface afterwards?
get some edible peroxide....its extremely concentrated so needs to be watered down A LOT....so a small amount is very stretchable...no stablizers in it so you can consume it orally
Why can't you just pour the peroxide solution over the top of the wipes, it would soak through all the wipes then turn the top to the bottom, I for one won't be standing there dipping each wipe separately over a box of 80 wipes, what a crazy suggestion.
Yes, it’s photosensitive, and should be stored in a cool place, but the idea that exposure to light raising its temperature and thereby causing it to decompose to oxygen and water is incorrect based on its chemistry.
Frank Gutowski I read a lot on proper storage of H2O2 and saw that in several articles. Here is one. www.h2o2.com/technical-library/default.aspx?pid=66&name=Safety-amp-Handling
That's a good idea, but can you make wipes out of something else without wasting existing wipes, let you know what I think, one thing is I think your dad has a beautiful daughter
dont do this. Recommended strength of most disinfectants are 60+ percent alcohol. If you take 1/3rd peroxide (90 percent) and dilute it with equal parts water. You will have a solution less then recommended alcohol level by the cdc and fda. If you add any kind of smelly good oils or anything you will also be further diluting it.
Found the answer. If stored in a darK bottle and container, away from light and humidity, it will last a long time. Otherwise, if you use a light container or bottle, it will last up to two weeks, if stored away from light and humidity.
Hey, be careful - the CDC has deemed that hydrogen peroxide, while a good cleaner is NOT effective as a disinfectant especially when diluted! Also FYI, Vodka, diluted alcohol and white vinegar are NOT effective according to the CDC. Vodka (80 proof only contains 40% ethyl alcohol) is not effective. White vinegar is a great cleaner but has no disinfecting qualities. Recommendations include diluted bleach formulas and UNDILUTED 70% or greater alcohol. See this article: @t You can add essential oils to mask some of the smell. Also, for hand sanitizer, add a little coconut oil and aloe vera so it's gentler on the hands.
Up till now I thought our political views were responsible for dividing this nation. Now I see it is our polarizing views on sanitation wipes! And its not that we care about the chemical make up of the product, or the biological impact on our bodies. Its" You're telling me I have to do this one at a time". Come on this is "Merica". Do Better!
bebetigre12 Watch my video on TH-cam censoring the Sani wipes talk I did with my surgeon father. That video as well as the original “stop panic buying wipes” will give you all you need to know.
This is the link from the CDC that I included in that video, see page 47 for H202 and page 53 for ammonium chlorides in conventional wipes (CDC makes it clear they’re unproven): www.cdc.gov/infectioncontrol/guidelines/disinfection/
@bebetigre12 - Where have you been hiding? Hydrogen Peroxide have been around as early as 1800's. Also, NO NEED for proof if you understand simple "Biology". Hydrogen Peroxide = *H2O2* - 99% of Bacteria + Germs can not live in the *H2* part.
I watched your Antifa video and it makes sense. I subbed. I watched your I get no cavities and meh... This is bonkers. The wipes aren't sterile in the first place, the peroxide when diluted with water becomes...water. Yikes. My opinion and mine alone is that taking medical advice from a reporter is like taking financial advice from Bugs Bunny.....unsubscribed.
I own a transportation/limo company in California and have been looking for natural DIY cleaner alternatives. Everything in the store is limited 1 per customer or sold out. Great idea. I shared it and hope more people make their own.
2:46 1/3cup water, 1/3cup 3% hydrogen peroxide (minimum, 0.5%, chemical & redisidue free), drip wipe (e.g. bamboo wipes). Test wipe if it burns or stings your skin then dilute it.
Just sub the paper towels for the dry wipes. Cut the paper towel roll in half and and put in a container. Then, add the ingredients as directed.
Yes Mary Jenkins- would make much more sense and would be less of a mess🤷🏽♀️
Exactly! Just imagine doing one wipe after another, it would take forever.
Thank you, exactly 🤗
I got to thinking the same thing, but I was watching another youtuber who cooks and her motto is: MY HOUSE MY WAY...YOUR HOUSE YOUR WAY...esp. if they did not ask for tips. Maybe this lady will change it up one day or keep doing it the way she likes - oh well, we all have our quirks about things and she probably likes those particular towels better - which is fine.
If you are being censored, you are on the right track my friend. Ignorance and stupidity are fertile ground for tyranny. Thanks for educating folks.
I have done something similar to this using an empty antibacterial wipes container that is about 12” tall & 4” in diameter. I used paper towels and just poured the liquid on them from the top. The wicking action of the paper towels did a good job of dispersing the hydrogen peroxide & water solution. I cut the roll of paper towels to fit the container, but they could be folded or just stuffed into the container depending on personal preference.
Great idea. I don't use lysol much and other brands are too strong Thank you for sharing.
you're welcome! lysol is toxic
Thanks you have done your research!!!!! Now all we have to do is follow the video!🙂👍
Thanks for sharing this. Those lysol wipes are so poisonous and now that they're in such high demand, I've heard of some places selling them for as much as $60 per can! Crazy when hydrogen peroxide is a couple bucks for a huge bottle
I am still stunned at how many people don't even read the label and use them for personal hygiene.
I bought 12% pharmacy grade and dilute to 3%. Researching I found that 3% has many stabilizers in it as HP is very unstable and will turn to water in a short time. 12% doesn't so be prepared to use it rather quickly after dilution w/ distilled water.
I'm very impressed with the information in this video! Best video on this topic I've watched and with tons of scientific back-up! Bravo!
Hi! You can also use wet mop refills and add your own disinfectants to the already wet ones or use the dry ones and add your own mix in a reused container from old wipes. That kind of material holds up far better than paper towels. Also, you can get 15 in a pack at the dollar tree. There is other cloth like wipes of a similar material there and these can be cut to size and used the same way.
Hello, I have asthma and a heart condition, it has been hard trying to find cleaning products so I feel lucky that I came across your Chanel, I just subscribed ❤️ Thank you for such valuable information. Can I use the kitchen towels from Costco istead of those wipes? Thank you in advance, God bless.
Isn't quat sanitizer the sanitation product that is required for dish washing machines?
going to try this thanks awesome video!
hi! just subscribed because of the disinfectant wipes. question- any alternative to the dry wipes that is as effective? & is it ok to put the wipes on a metal canister? thanks
That is good that your teach this to people. I love hydrogen peroxide
I've used Hydrogen Peroxide to get rid of skin cancer. It does a good job too. I would suggest that you rinse the area with water after your done though to prevent any kind of burning sensation.
Wouldn’t it be easier to pour the solution to the stack of wipes so they soak it up instead of dipping 1 wipe at a time?
Helen Lam you can totally do that I just want to make sure mine are uniformly soaked and I don’t mind taking the time
I noticed that the lysol wipes were much more drier meaning it would take more wipes to clean the same surface. My hands feel numb and it feels like the chemicals is penetrating my arteries and stuff (highly concerned about this). I wish i just did this because i can decide how wet are my wipes and would last long.
Interesting Wipes
Thanks good info.
From los Angeles
I’m wondering if this is a good option right now since isopropyl alcohol is so scarce. Is there a reason why we can’t just pour the solution over the stack of wipes in the container rather than soaking each one individually?
Salty y I just want each wipe to be consistent but I guess you could put them in a big tub together and soak for a while.
@Salty y use Hydrogen Peroxide. Different that isopropyl alcohol.
No this is not going to work disinffecting areas of the house. You need a good ammount of time to do that and oxygen evaporates over that period of tume when exposed to air, Its good for disinffecting like hands, fruits and veggies as the virus doesnt work well with food. Bleach solution or powder is the best form for disinfecting areas. Stop making claims that no one knows about, plus 3% should not be dilluted with water that much
Stephen That’s not true - where is the research to support your statement? I’ve posted multiple links that hydrogen peroxide is virucidal, etc and far better tested than the QUATS in conventional wipes.
@@AlisonMorrow no need to research, just check the chemical composition of its substance and its valie. Its just typically oxygenated water, while yes oxygen is a good form to kills virus and bacteria for skin, fruits, plants and when cautious and the right ammount internally, it doesnt act well on solid surface . Adding more water to a 3% solution would lessen its strength. The virus have protein fatty lipids, imagine an h202 cleaning an oily countertop? I would rather spray it with 3% solution, wait for 2 mins then wipe it as friction, Then repeat. Other than just making straight wipes out of it.
Hello...nice video. What kind of cleaner do you use for bathrooms? Do you use these?
I spray the hydrogen peroxide 3% straight from the bottle
@@AlisonMorrow oh okay thank you! Do you have a video on cleaning the entire bathroom?
Thanks for the info
Could you use a few drops of tea tree oil or another essential oil for scent?
Sandy Kapler totally!!
Tea tree oil is extremely poisonous to dogs
Kathy Peters I did not know that , thanks Kathy Peters. I’ll not be using this on my dog though. I promise.
@@kathypeters7904 then dont whipe your dog whit them
john quiñones @ I didn't say anything about wiping the dog with them. If the dog licks something that tea tree oil is on it's toxic
Don't you have to use distilled water and let it set on the surface for like 20 plus minutes wet at that dilution rate?
Hydrogen Peroxide, even with stabilizers, would decompose to oxygen and water pretty readily under these storage conditions. These wipes would need to be used within a day or two.
I agree, this is a bit sketchy for having wipes on hand. I'd maybe have the dry wipes and have the H202 on hand in the spray type bottle they now come in and refill with the old standard. Also I've never gotten burned by H202 @ 3% but each to their experience.
Waisting time
Why don’t you put all in the same time ...
Ir Irani I want the wipes to have consistency
Alison Morrow
Can you do that procedure and then dump the excess in the tub?
Daisy MM Sure, I soak each individually first so they’re all uniform
Alison Morrow thank you 😁
@@AlisonMorrow If you pour the solution over the top of the wipes in the plastic container all the wipes will absorb the solution. I do it all the time with alcohol solution. It's common sense really!
EXAMPLE:
Fill a small bowl with water. Place the very tip of one corner of a paper towel in the water in the bowl. In just a little bit the whole paper towel will have absorbed the water uniformly.....no brainer!
If you’re interested in making your own toxic free wipes, which are also better at sanitizing and killing viruses than Lysol and Clorox wipes, check it out. I’ve since learned that if you want to dilute your hydrogen peroxide, which is not necessary, use distilled, filtered or reverse osmosis water and avoid tap water if possible.
This is great, thanks. I saw a DIY hack awhile ago where they took one of the round containers and fit in a whole roll of paper towels and then added the solution. I bet that would work great too but you would need one of those old Clorox Wipes containers... Is this what you are using to wipe down your groceries, etc? I'm super challenged by that right now and think I might set something up in the back of my car/trunk to place my groceries in and then clean them on the way out? Ugh. So time consuming...
From the CDC:
Hydrogen peroxide is active against a wide range of microorganisms, including bacteria, yeasts, fungi, viruses, and spores 78, 654. A 0.5% accelerated hydrogen peroxide demonstrated bactericidal and virucidal activity in 1 minute and mycobactericidal and fungicidal activity in 5 minutes 656. Bactericidal effectiveness and stability of hydrogen peroxide in urine has been demonstrated against a variety of health-care-associated pathogens; organisms with high cellular catalase activity (e.g., S. aureus, S. marcescens, and Proteus mirabilis) required 30-60 minutes of exposure to 0.6% hydrogen peroxide for a 108 reduction in cell counts, whereas organisms with lower catalase activity (e.g., E. coli, Streptococcus species, and Pseudomonas species) required only 15 minutes’ exposure 657. In an investigation of 3%, 10%, and 15% hydrogen peroxide for reducing spacecraft bacterial populations, a complete kill of 106 spores (i.e., Bacillus species) occurred with a 10% concentration and a 60-minute exposure time. A 3% concentration for 150 minutes killed 106 spores in six of seven exposure trials 658. A 10% hydrogen peroxide solution resulted in a 103 decrease in B. atrophaeus spores, and a ≥105 decrease when tested against 13 other pathogens in 30 minutes at 20°C 659, 660. A 3.0% hydrogen peroxide solution was ineffective against VRE after 3 and 10 minutes exposure times 661 and caused only a 2-log10 reduction in the number of Acanthamoeba cysts in approximately 2 hours 662. A 7% stabilized hydrogen peroxide proved to be sporicidal (6 hours of exposure), mycobactericidal (20 minutes), fungicidal (5 minutes) at full strength, virucidal (5 minutes) and bactericidal (3 minutes) at a 1:16 dilution when a quantitative carrier test was used 655. The 7% solution of hydrogen peroxide, tested after 14 days of stress (in the form of germ-loaded carriers and respiratory therapy equipment), was sporicidal (>7 log10 reduction in 6 hours), mycobactericidal (>6.5 log10 reduction in 25 minutes), fungicidal (>5 log10 reduction in 20 minutes), bactericidal (>6 log10 reduction in 5 minutes) and virucidal (5 log10 reduction in 5 minutes) 663. Synergistic sporicidal effects were observed when spores were exposed to a combination of hydrogen peroxide (5.9%-23.6%) and peracetic acid 664. Other studies demonstrated the antiviral activity of hydrogen peroxide against rhinovirus 665. The time required for inactivating three serotypes of rhinovirus using a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution was 6-8 minutes; this time increased with decreasing concentrations (18-20 minutes at 1.5%, 50-60 minutes at 0.75%).
When you say this, do you mean you get equivalent results whether you do or don't dilute in water (using 3% h202)?
@@lace77721 It can be diluted to .5% and be effective
Alison Morrow Thank you so much for the quick response! I can't believe the percentage of ppl writing comments to question your obviously thorough research! Thank you so much for taking the time to share with us 🤗
Thank you 🙏🏻
Wouldn’t it be advisable to wear gloves when dipping so you won’t contaminate them?!
carla mdonald
It’s a disinfectant solution. It’s not going to become contaminated.
Yes, Carla, it very well could become contaminated by her own hands. If she's going to do it the hard way, at least put gloves on. This is why the paper towel roll is the best method.
I wear the gloves, disposable and reusable my husband is retired Marine gave me a lesson,
Always, Always wear the gloves,the chemical Will wear you.
charisma Luv EXACTLY! Many don’t know that you’ll supposed to wear gloves when USING antibacterial wipes or thoroughly wash your hands after using them without gloves.
Could you just pour a certain amount of H202 into the moist wipe box instead of the dip and ring out each one process? I would think that they would absorb all of the H2O2.
Are these one-time use or reusable after washing (similar to how other bamboo paper towel/wipes products are)
Can you pour the solution over the wipes.?
if you want but I like to make sure mine are uniformly soaked
Beth, I like your suggestion and using more solution would make all of the wipes wet in the container.
Could you boil tap water that is used in the formula to help kill off anything in the water? Thanks!
Richard Forsting Not totally sure on that...
Great Video, thank you
Sam T You’re welcome!
Isn't hydrogen peroxide already diluted with water?
Love your channel but you need to take a couple of chemistry and biochemistry classes.
Two guys walk into a bar, the first guy says, I'll have an H2O. The second guy says that sounds good I'll have an H2O2. The second guy died.
Thank you very much for the info.
How long do the wipes last in the container? Also, I see that hydrogen peroxide kills a whole lot of things but I'm not sure if it kills the Coronavirus. Does it? And if it does, at what percent? 3%, the type you usually see in the store? Also, I know that the surface has to remain wet for a certain amount of time to disinfect. How long does it has to remain wet to be effective? Last question. Do you have to wash down the surface afterwards?
get some edible peroxide....its extremely concentrated so needs to be watered down A LOT....so a small amount is very stretchable...no stablizers in it so you can consume it orally
Thank you 😊 for sharing . I'm allergic to many cleaning chemicals.
You’re welcome 😊
Can u not just pour the solution inrobthe box of wipes..instead of individual soak each one?
John Greene You can but I like mine to be uniform. One idea I tried is dump solution and wipes into vacuum seal bag. That works.
Why can't you just pour the peroxide solution over the top of the wipes, it would soak through all the wipes then turn the top to the bottom, I for one won't be standing there dipping each wipe separately over a box of 80 wipes, what a crazy suggestion.
Katherine Sneddon You can do whatever you want, I like mine to be uniformly soaked. You can also use a vacuum seal bag if you have that
Does anyone know if we can clean our facemasks with hydrogen peroxide 3%?
Not sure if this is misinformation 🤔
Thank you so much. Great informative video. And congratulations on your baby boy or girl. :)
Thank you!
Thank you
Twin Boys you’re welcome 😇
I can you let me know if I can use these with baby wipes that are wet?
The Natural Baby Wipes = YES
is this good for corona virus ? And is this solution harm the paint?
It kills viruses. Not sure about paint.
Does anyone know if hydrogen peroxide breaks down in water like bleach does?
Bleach won't.
So, what is % of v/v based on your solutions? Gosh am so curious? You just treated it like candies 😎
Yes, it’s photosensitive, and should be stored in a cool place, but the idea that exposure to light raising its temperature and thereby causing it to decompose to oxygen and water is incorrect based on its chemistry.
Frank Gutowski I read a lot on proper storage of H2O2 and saw that in several articles. Here is one. www.h2o2.com/technical-library/default.aspx?pid=66&name=Safety-amp-Handling
How long does the solution last? I know clorox with water only lasts for 24 hours.
How do you know this?
The whole bottle of peroxide than dilute?
YES !!! It needs to be at 5% to kill H-COV 2 = 1+ Minute Time
DISTILLED WATER!! You must use DISTILLED WATER!
Jim where do you see that? I haven't read that in any source I've checked.
I'll find and send you the links@@AlisonMorrow And the folks I bought my 12% were adamant about that...
@@AlisonMorrow Did you dilute your 3% down? I seem to remember the good Dr. mentioning that...
That's a good idea, but can you make wipes out of something else without wasting existing wipes, let you know what I think, one thing is I think your dad has a beautiful daughter
Haha thanks! I don’t know if you can use existing wipes with chemicals on them.
Thank you. Congratulations on your new arrival.
Sew Craft That! thanks only a few weeks left!!
So the ratio of water:hydrogen peroxide is 1:1 right? It doesn't have to be 1/3 cup water : 1/3 cup hydrogen p.
correct
1/3 cup is 3 oz. Basically wathever amount you put of peroxide put same of water
One by one ... geesh . I mean I know a lot of people have more time now ,but ......seems very time consuming 😐
bambie381 put in vacuum seal bag or dump H2O2 in container - I like mine to be uniform
Thanks for the info , I will try that .
Stay well !
Is HP totally non toxic?
It's hydrogen and oxygen
some health food nuts drink H2O2.. It is toxic to germs. I use it to kill P Acnes bacterium in my work
dont do this. Recommended strength of most disinfectants are 60+ percent alcohol. If you take 1/3rd peroxide (90 percent) and dilute it with equal parts water. You will have a solution less then recommended alcohol level by the cdc and fda. If you add any kind of smelly good oils or anything you will also be further diluting it.
How long do they last? How long before they expire?
Found the answer.
If stored in a darK bottle and container, away from light and humidity, it will last a long time.
Otherwise, if you use a light container or bottle, it will last up to two weeks, if stored away from light and humidity.
Hey, be careful - the CDC has deemed that hydrogen peroxide, while a good cleaner is NOT effective as a disinfectant especially when diluted! Also FYI, Vodka, diluted alcohol and white vinegar are NOT effective according to the CDC. Vodka (80 proof only contains 40% ethyl alcohol) is not effective. White vinegar is a great cleaner but has no disinfecting qualities. Recommendations include diluted bleach formulas and UNDILUTED 70% or greater alcohol. See this article: @t
You can add essential oils to mask some of the smell. Also, for hand sanitizer, add a little coconut oil and aloe vera so it's gentler on the hands.
Melanie Crane That’s not true about dilution - see page 47 www.cdc.gov/infectioncontrol/guidelines/disinfection/disinfection-methods/chemical.html
@@AlisonMorrow ...and you are able to back up what you said👍
Trust me if you put all together and put the liquid on the top wouldn’t make any difference then putting one by one 🧐
honey, get a damn spray bottle stick the solution in and spray a paper towel.
honeyWear gloves.
Up till now I thought our political views were responsible for dividing this nation. Now I see it is our polarizing views on sanitation wipes! And its not that we care about the chemical make up of the product, or the biological impact on our bodies. Its" You're telling me I have to do this one at a time". Come on this is "Merica". Do Better!
.. Is this solution kills coronavirus?? Thanks!
Bishnu Raut It kills viruses, yes.
It will only kill H-COV 2 = 1+ Minute
Where is proof if it kills virus?Post info please.
bebetigre12 Watch my video on TH-cam censoring the Sani wipes talk I did with my surgeon father. That video as well as the original “stop panic buying wipes” will give you all you need to know.
bebetigre12 Also read the descriptions under those videos
This is the link from the CDC that I included in that video, see page 47 for H202 and page 53 for ammonium chlorides in conventional wipes (CDC makes it clear they’re unproven): www.cdc.gov/infectioncontrol/guidelines/disinfection/
@bebetigre12 - Where have you been hiding? Hydrogen Peroxide have been around as early as 1800's. Also, NO NEED for proof if you understand simple "Biology". Hydrogen Peroxide = *H2O2* - 99% of Bacteria + Germs can not live in the *H2* part.
@@JodBronson 👏
Hydrogen peroxide is not a naturally occurring chemical.
I watched your Antifa video and it makes sense. I subbed. I watched your I get no cavities and meh... This is bonkers. The wipes aren't sterile in the first place, the peroxide when diluted with water becomes...water. Yikes. My opinion and mine alone is that taking medical advice from a reporter is like taking financial advice from Bugs Bunny.....unsubscribed.
Lmao! Wth? Why not make enough, and pour all of it in the container?
sharonDnc Because I want them to be uniformly soaked.