I use about a tablespoon. If it’s a heavy, larger load, or heavy soil, two tablespoons.
@FrankGutowski-ls8jt5 ай бұрын
Baking soda and salt are both fillers and a waste of $. You need to include an alkaline water softener instead. Washing soda, for example. Dr. Bronners sells comparable liquid soap. They’re all 40-50% water. Their dilution cheat sheet recommends one cup for 2-3 loads. So your batch should wash 4-6 loads. This formulation should be avoided.
@The_regular_home5 ай бұрын
This mix has been working just fine for me and my family.
@FrankGutowski-ls8jt5 ай бұрын
@@The_regular_home Whether or not you understand or believe it, science is always right.
@FrankGutowski-ls8jt5 ай бұрын
@@The_regular_home Soap hasn’t been used for over 70 years to wash laundry. It deposits scum which traps dirt and harbors bacteria. Scum makes fabrics dingy, smelly, coarse and water repellent. No modern HE washer is designed to use it. Only clueless DIY enthusiasts still promote its use.
@The_regular_home5 ай бұрын
I know science is viable, when did I say it wasn’t? In my scientific method, my hypothesis was that this would suffice, turns out my experiment went well and the data that I’ve collected has shown not to be disproven. Thanks though…
@The_regular_home5 ай бұрын
@@FrankGutowski-ls8jt one more thing. Technically science isn’t always right, that’s why it is always being disproven through research, experimentation, controlled trials etc.