Buy UNscented fabric softener.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
Do people agree, then, that fabric softener is the right stuff to use?
See:
http://www.recipegoldmine.com/house/house17.html
The fabric softener keeps the static away. The ammonia keeps
visitors, managers, nosey customers, and relatives away. If you smell
the fabric softener, you're using way too much.
However, there's a catch. Fabric softener may be toxic. See:
http://www.ourlittleplace.com/notice.html
http://www.ghchealth.com/forum/post-325.html
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/alweb23e.htm
http://users.lmi.net/~wilworks/ehnfs.htm
http://users.lmi.net/wilworks/ehnlinx/f.htm#Softeners
I'm not too sure if I totally believe all this.
Anyway, there are unscented and hopefully non-toxic vinegar based
fabric softeners available:
http://www.villagegreenmarket.com/html/ntc11109.html
However, I don't think these will work as an anti-static spray. One
way to check is to try it.
--
Jeff Liebermann je...@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
mc wrote:
> Is there an easy way I could make my own anti-static carpet spray? The
> commercial product is often hard to find.
Really ?
Graham
Inviato da X-Privat.Org - Registrazione gratuita http://www.x-privat.org/join.php
Thanks.
Downy "Free and Sensitive" fabric softener is odorless, but the bottle says,
"Do not mix with water and store." Hmmm...
Yes. This is a town of 100,000, not a major city. The computer stores no
longer have it. There is no electronics place except Radio Shack. There's
a cleaning-supplies store I haven't checked that sells various kinds of
carpet cleaning chemicals.
How long does it last? Does it do any good in dry weather (when it's needed
most)?
If it will pick up any moisture from the air, it should stay conductive.
Hmmm... Calcium chloride?
> I've tried adding fabric
> softener but it's too strongly scented to use this way.
Google MSDSs; you'll find many are just surfactants. A bottle of the
cheapest non-polyquat swimming pool algaecide would be an unscented
lifetime supply (diluted with water).
Richard J Kinch wrote:
Electrolube's data sheet gives no clue as to contents.
Graham
Don't they sell Static Guard clothes spray at your local grocery store?
Glycerol is often used as a humectant.
I don't know if that would help in your case.
Essentially any ionic surfactant should do the job. ;-)
Good Luck!
Rich
That's OK; when you premix it to put in your antistatic bottle, you're not
"storing" it, it's in use as your antistatic spray bottle contents.
Problem solved! ;-)
Cheers!
Rich
We had our offices made with esd carpeting. Thats always an idea.
Spray some WD-40 around? Coat your entire carpet with vegetable
oil? (Eww.)
Those "anti-static sheets" used in clothes dryers are not based on
conductivity, instead they give your clothes a molecule-thin coating
of oil. Then, when the clothes rub together, it's an oil-on-oil
contact.
"Electrification by contact" requires dissimilar substances, therefore
very little charge-separation occurs with slightly-oily surfaces.
((((((((((((((((((((((( ( ( (o) ) ) )))))))))))))))))))))))
William J. Beaty Research Engineer
be...@chem.washington.edu UW Chem Dept, Bagley Hall RM74
bi...@eskimo.com Box 351700, Seattle, WA 98195-1700
ph425-222-5066 http//staff.washington.edu/wbeaty/
Did you try Downy free & clear -- no stinkum in it.
I think it's the one that says "Don't mix with water and store," leading me
to wonder what's going on.
I have severe allergies and asthma and have found this out the hard way.
Guessing but once sufficiently diluted, the anti-microbial/anti-fungal
concentration probably drops below a threshold level and it can "spoil"
(grow mold, smell funky, etc.) Probably possible to keep a batch of the
diluted solution in the refrigerator. If you have access to one of those
kitchen vacuum units (FoodSaver or similar), dump the extra in a Mason
jar and evacuate it before storing.
--
Rich Webb Norfolk, VA