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Use Patio Magic instead. Spray on a solution, leave it. Don’t wash it off.Very timely thread for me. I've never used oxalic acid for cleaning but my deck needs a thorough cleaning and has some rust stains. If I buy it in powder form how much should I put in a bucket of water and what precautions do I need to take to prevent injury to myself.
Make up a saturated solution in hot water then dilute it twice the volume of cold water. For application wear latex gloves although not strictly necessary and eye protection if you are a messy worker. It's toxic and should not be injected orally and will also be absorbed through the skin so keep it off yourself and if you do get it on you wash it off with copious quantities of cold water. That is the H&S advice in reality apart from drinking it anything else and you won't come to harm. Apply it with a soft brush and leave for an hour or two then wash off with a hose pipe, you may need, depending on the state of your decks to go over it again and or scrub a little. It works in a solution so once it's dried out then it won't be active so do it in the shade and as you are in Türkiye choose a time of day when it's coolest. If you have vertical or difficult areas you can make some of the concentrated solution into a paste with wallpaper paste and apply that with a brush then simply hose off when it's done its work.Very timely thread for me. I've never used oxalic acid for cleaning but my deck needs a thorough cleaning and has some rust stains. If I buy it in powder form how much should I put in a bucket of water and what precautions do I need to take to prevent injury to myself.
We use oxalic acid for similar reasons, a brown stain above the water line from tannins in the water, a particular problem for yachts that frequent Tasmania. Its a characteristic of yachts having sailed in Tassie. Here most yachts are lighter (supposedly white), whether old or newerMaybe it's not a problem where you sail but in the UK older light coloured GRP boats commonly get brown staining over much of the topsides that oxalic acid removes. It's particularly apparent on boats that sail in murky water like the east coast rivers or the Bristol Channel.
Wear rubber gloves and eye protection.Causes kidney damage.....enters through bare skin.....
... Just don't be profligate with the oxalic, spot use seems a good option.
Jonathan
deletedI could see a LOT (several kilos) of oxalic acid doing harm in a locked marina, but most places in the UK, the management changes the water twice a day so unless everybody in the area is going mad with it, it'll be diluted to vanishing point before it can do any damage
No it won't.Another numpty question. Will the oxalic acid damage my windows [I'm assuming they're some sort of perspex]. There's one area that needs cleaning which drips onto the salon/cockpit windows.
Not the windows but I've had some issues with it causing discolouration on aluminium anodised deck cleats. not a problem if you're careful when you apply it and you don't splash it all over.Another numpty question. Will the oxalic acid damage my windows [I'm assuming they're some sort of perspex]. There's one area that needs cleaning which drips onto the salon/cockpit windows.
As an aside, it can pit aluminium as well as discolouring it….Another numpty question. Will the oxalic acid damage my windows [I'm assuming they're some sort of perspex]. There's one area that needs cleaning which drips onto the salon/cockpit windows.
A Damascene conversion !iron stain forming later but replication will remove it..
Just for fun, I asked ChatGP calculate the amount of 99.8% pure oxalic acid needed to decrease the pH of 40,000,000 litre of seawater from 8.1 to 8.0.I could see a LOT (several kilos) of oxalic acid doing harm in a locked marina, but most places in the UK, the management changes the water twice a day so unless everybody in the area is going mad with it, it'll be diluted to vanishing point before it can do any damage
As a matter of interest and picking up on
Just for fun, I asked ChatGP calculate the amount of 99.8% pure oxalic acid needed to decrease the pH of 40,000,000 litre of seawater from 8.1 to 8.0.
It seems to ignore the fact that the slight alkalinity of seawater is due to the bicarbonate concentration. The calculation should be treated as the partial neutralisation of a weak base by a weak acid.I am not sure if this is right and any expert comment would be appreciated.
PS Other chemical effects/interactions ignored.
Seems logical. Even from my (extremely poor) schoolboy grounding in Chemistry, I remember that heat makes a chemical reaction more vigorous.Just as an observation after many years of using an oxalic acid/washing up liquid solution to clean my boat - it works much more effectively and much faster in warm weather (Mediterranean warm) and in my subjective opinion direct sunlight helps too.
It doesn’t go in the water. It stays on the teak, ropes, sprayhood etc. Leave it, don’t wash it off.I think I would prefer to use the fairly natural Oxalic Acid rather than Patio Magic which carries the warning that it contains chemicals that have an adverse effect upon marine organisms.