The bubble thing really hits home. I'm a professional cleaner and people always think it weird we have almost no bubbles coming of our cleaning agents. Only the detergent stage has some bubbles, but it's exactly as he says. That's the stabilizer doing it's job holding the product on the walls and ceilings. Effective cleaning is all about letting the chemical do it's job. If you are scrubbing and sweating, you don't have the right chemicals.
you are bloody hilarious! i'm really digging your energy for these videos! you'd be an excellent science or chemistry teacher!! im such a nerd i love learning about this stuff, but you've just made my day by explaining this nerdy niche information in the best and funniest way possible! kudos my friend!
I have a question and don't know if you can see it and/or answer it. I was thinking if a soap reacts with oil directly or is foamed with a sponge which one is better in terms of its ability to remove oil?
@@CleanWithConfidence Hi, I've been reading about this and there is something that isn't yet clear for me (because of how its treated in several places), most talk about chelating agents and builders yet others say builder is synonym of chelating agent. As my current understanding chelating agents trap mineral ions so they do not use up surfactants, but builders also have an impact on these ions to "build" upon the surfactant effectiveness. If this is correct, the question is whats the difference in how they work with these ions? Meaning if a chelator is something that trap ions I am guessing that builders either work in a different way (screwing with ions but not trapping them) because if they do trap ions then they are chelators and the difference must lie somewhere else. Can you elaborate on this?. Also, a stupid question: If surfactants make water "wetter" if I grab a hair spray that contains water + surfactant, would I have a better water hair spray? Make a video on this!
@@sebastianj.434 Chelating Agents and Builders do the same thing. Not all cleaning solutions contain both. Some solutions only contain builders or vice versa. Sometimes adding chelating agents into a solution that already has builders is overkill. In an nutshell, they deal with the calcium, magnesium etc. so the surfactants can do their job. They do the same thing just in different ways. Chelating agents deal with the ions in a more aggressive way surrounding them like a gang jumping an innocent bystander. The builders are more stealthy. They trick the ions by pretending to be something they are not. The ions think they are calcium, etc, -- work their way over to the builder, then the builder will reach out grab them and wont let go!!!!! They are like magnets. Builders also do other things like help maintain the ph of a solution but their main purpose is to deal with those ions.
The bubble thing really hits home. I'm a professional cleaner and people always think it weird we have almost no bubbles coming of our cleaning agents. Only the detergent stage has some bubbles, but it's exactly as he says. That's the stabilizer doing it's job holding the product on the walls and ceilings. Effective cleaning is all about letting the chemical do it's job. If you are scrubbing and sweating, you don't have the right chemicals.
Thank you so much. I love your sense of humor too.
You are welcome, thanks for watching!
you are bloody hilarious! i'm really digging your energy for these videos! you'd be an excellent science or chemistry teacher!! im such a nerd i love learning about this stuff, but you've just made my day by explaining this nerdy niche information in the best and funniest way possible! kudos my friend!
@@vom-batus thanks for the encouragement! Glad you have found the video value 👍🙂
Very interesting. Thanks for the hard work you put into this. I use vinegar for all my. cleaning.
You are welcome!
I like your channel! I mean, I like the way you explain these things!
Glad you are finding the videos valuable :-)
"....next thing you know they're walking out in traffic and get hit by a car". Cracked me up! I love your videos!
Lol glad you have enjoyed them Miss Janet!🙂
Interesting and helpful
Thanks!
Love the education and humor 👍👍
Glad you enjoyed the video! :)
Cool, I didn't know all that about hard water and the cleaning agents. Thank you for the info!
You are welcome!
Thank you for providing this helpful info in such a fun way ⭐️
Yes ma'am! :)
Good video Man
GOD bless you
@@zeal2learn312 glad you found it valuable 👍🙂
Love your explanation with the picture bro ✨👍🏼
Glad you found the video valuable!
Excellent information and fun to watch!
Glad you enjoyed the video!
I have a question and don't know if you can see it and/or answer it. I was thinking if a soap reacts with oil directly or is foamed with a sponge which one is better in terms of its ability to remove oil?
How do you tell what is a stabilizer and what is an enhancer on the label? This was very informative but raises more questions
Wow! That was fast! Thanks for the great content!
You are welcome!
What are the chemical names in each category used in most cleaners?
That’s helpful. Thank you!
Happy to help!
Thank you for your content.. helps me so much.
Yes ma'am happy to help:)
@@CleanWithConfidence Hi, I've been reading about this and there is something that isn't yet clear for me (because of how its treated in several places), most talk about chelating agents and builders yet others say builder is synonym of chelating agent. As my current understanding chelating agents trap mineral ions so they do not use up surfactants, but builders also have an impact on these ions to "build" upon the surfactant effectiveness. If this is correct, the question is whats the difference in how they work with these ions? Meaning if a chelator is something that trap ions I am guessing that builders either work in a different way (screwing with ions but not trapping them) because if they do trap ions then they are chelators and the difference must lie somewhere else. Can you elaborate on this?.
Also, a stupid question: If surfactants make water "wetter" if I grab a hair spray that contains water + surfactant, would I have a better water hair spray? Make a video on this!
@@sebastianj.434 Chelating Agents and Builders do the same thing. Not all cleaning solutions contain both. Some solutions only contain builders or vice versa. Sometimes adding chelating agents into a solution that already has builders is overkill. In an nutshell, they deal with the calcium, magnesium etc. so the surfactants can do their job. They do the same thing just in different ways. Chelating agents deal with the ions in a more aggressive way surrounding them like a gang jumping an innocent bystander. The builders are more stealthy. They trick the ions by pretending to be something they are not. The ions think they are calcium, etc, -- work their way over to the builder, then the builder will reach out grab them and wont let go!!!!! They are like magnets. Builders also do other things like help maintain the ph of a solution but their main purpose is to deal with those ions.
@@CleanWithConfidence I see, thank you.
Haha you’re funny. Great video!
Happy to help!
Oh my god...I'm glad I'm not the only one who request their house cleaner to put pine-sol in the toilet for the smell.
No sir, you are not the only one. :)