jwilson
Well-Known Member
Had a non-critical for strength (grossly oversized for required load but nicer to handle) piece of 3-strand polyester that had been left out attached to a dinghy for a year and was dark green with algae instead of white.
Tried a soak in hot water and "Vanish", followed by vigorous scrubbing: not much improvement - lots of green still in fibres of rope.
Then put it into a diluted solution of "Milton" (baby bottle steriliser) and within seconds you could actually see it getting whiter. After five minutes pure white. Active ingredient in Milton is apparently sodium hypochlorite 2%, which I diluted maybe 20 to 40 to 1.
As far as I know polyester (ie terylene/dacron) is not affected by bleaches, though nylons are. Before I take a bottle of Milton and a bucket down to the boat and do all our halyards, reefing lines etc in the same stuff any comments on any potential weakening...? And will it bleach out the coloured "rogues yarn" strands that identify particular lines ...? I do know that it should not get onto metal objects.
Tried a soak in hot water and "Vanish", followed by vigorous scrubbing: not much improvement - lots of green still in fibres of rope.
Then put it into a diluted solution of "Milton" (baby bottle steriliser) and within seconds you could actually see it getting whiter. After five minutes pure white. Active ingredient in Milton is apparently sodium hypochlorite 2%, which I diluted maybe 20 to 40 to 1.
As far as I know polyester (ie terylene/dacron) is not affected by bleaches, though nylons are. Before I take a bottle of Milton and a bucket down to the boat and do all our halyards, reefing lines etc in the same stuff any comments on any potential weakening...? And will it bleach out the coloured "rogues yarn" strands that identify particular lines ...? I do know that it should not get onto metal objects.