DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Removing rust stains in toilet (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/212650-removing-rust-stains-toilet.html)

Ken Knecht[_2_] August 29th 07 06:43 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA


--
Every silver lining has a cloud.




Don Phillipson August 29th 07 06:44 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
"Ken Knecht" wrote in message
...

Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.


Dissolved iron appears to be the commonest cause of
rust stains on plumbing. Hardware stores sell rust
remover chemicals.

--
Don Phillipson
Carlsbad Springs
(Ottawa, Canada)



franz frippl August 29th 07 09:00 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 17:43:11 +0000, Ken Knecht wrote:

Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA



I have had good luck with a product called "Rust Out". Same company also
makes "Yellow Out" to remove dinginess from clothes washed in rusty water.

While you are cleaning the bowl, you may wish to clean out tank. You
might be surprised how dirty that reservoir can become over time. I just
cleaned out one in a cabin recently acquired. The Rust Out did marvels.

Joe August 29th 07 11:48 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
On Aug 29, 12:43 pm, Ken Knecht wrote:
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?


If you think you've exhausted the possibilities on the grocery store
shelves, try a janitorial supply house for something with some real
muscle.
Also, you're smart to go after the root of the problem, too. In an
agricultural area, it is common for mega-farm operators to irrigate
without regard to the underlying acquifer's sustainable capacity,
resulting in severe loss of water quality for well owners for miles
around. It would be prudent to have your water tested and well level
checked on a much more frequent basis to monitor any possible such
changes. Your well service professionals will then be avle to assist
you in whatever treatments seem necessary.. Good luck.

Joe


franz frippl August 30th 07 12:00 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
On Wed, 29 Aug 2007 15:48:22 -0700, Joe wrote:

On Aug 29, 12:43 pm, Ken Knecht wrote:
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?


If you think you've exhausted the possibilities on the grocery store
shelves, try a janitorial supply house for something with some real
muscle.
Also, you're smart to go after the root of the problem, too. In an
agricultural area, it is common for mega-farm operators to irrigate
without regard to the underlying acquifer's sustainable capacity,
resulting in severe loss of water quality for well owners for miles
around. It would be prudent to have your water tested and well level
checked on a much more frequent basis to monitor any possible such
changes. Your well service professionals will then be avle to assist
you in whatever treatments seem necessary.. Good luck.

Joe


A reminder that some chemicals will actually etch the porcelain. Pay a
little extra and get what is appropriate for your problem.

If the porcelain becomes etched, there's not much else you can do.

Of course, this may be your chance to get a "green" toilet and save some
water.

Frank August 30th 07 12:52 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
Ken Knecht wrote:
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA


Iron Out works well. We have septic too. Moderate amounts of all these
type cleaners have not bothered it.

Frank

[email protected] August 31st 07 03:58 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
Muratic acid worked wonders for my vintage 1950 toilet. Looked like
new I was done. Stuff from the grocery or department stores was too
week for me.


Ken Knecht[_2_] August 31st 07 07:05 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
wrote in news:1188572298.793416.42670
@o80g2000hse.googlegroups.com:

Muratic acid worked wonders for my vintage 1950 toilet. Looked like
new I was done. Stuff from the grocery or department stores was too
week for me.


Sounds dangerous to use with a septic tank?


--
Every silver lining has a cloud.




Heathcliff September 1st 07 01:37 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 

Ken Knecht wrote:
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA


If you would like to try something relatively nontoxic, go to the
grocery store and take a look at the coffee pot cleaners, find one
that is citric acid. Same stuff as in lemonade mix, etc. I have had
good luck removing iron stains with it. -- H


CathyLee[_2_] September 1st 07 01:40 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
Iron Out tablets for your tank lasts 30 days+

CathyLee

"Ken Knecht" wrote in message
...
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA


--
Every silver lining has a cloud.






[email protected] September 1st 07 03:20 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
On Aug 29, 12:43?pm, Ken Knecht wrote:
Anyone have any favorite methods of removing rust stains/streaks from
toilet bowls? I tried Sno-Bol and Clorax and Lysol toilet cleaners and
those toilet 'scrubbers' on a plastic handle with little or no success.
I'm tempted to try an SOS pad but it probably would ruin the toilet. I've
read lemon juice and borax works and will pick up some borax next time
I'm in town, probably tomorrow, and try it.

Any other suggestions? I have a septic tank so must be careful what I
use.

Wonder where this is coming from? It only recently started. Water from
the faucets seems clear. I'm on well water in an agricultural area. Maybe
the toilet tank? If so, anyone have a good way to clean it out?

TIA

--
Every silver lining has a cloud.


I had unbelievable stains in a toilet that I coudn't get out with
chemicals. After trying several different things (CLR, Rust-Out,
etc.), I went at it with a pumice stone, figuring I would ruin the
porcelain and need to replace the toilet. I removed the stains
(probably significnatly "loosened" chemically) and had no visible
damage to the toilet. I was very gentle with the pumice stone, and
the rust seemed to just come right off.


PaPaPeng September 1st 07 03:55 AM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 19:20:45 -0700, "
wrote:


I had unbelievable stains in a toilet that I coudn't get out with
chemicals. After trying several different things (CLR, Rust-Out,
etc.), I went at it with a pumice stone, figuring I would ruin the
porcelain and need to replace the toilet. I removed the stains
(probably significnatly "loosened" chemically) and had no visible
damage to the toilet. I was very gentle with the pumice stone, and
the rust seemed to just come right off.



My solution was to first scrape crisscross lines into the stain using
a fork or something similar. Then I use fine wet and dry sandpaper to
abrade off the stain. If the sandpaper is fine enough it will
"polish" the ceramic surface. The initial scraping gives the
sandpaper something to "bite" on. I don't have enough strength to
scratch the ceramic surface with the fork.

[email protected] September 1st 07 03:24 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 

As others have said use "Iron out".

Iron out is powder. Wet the side wall of the bowl and then throw a
light coat of the powder around the surface. Let it set for a while.

Caution: Do not breath the fumes!

Ken Knecht[_2_] September 1st 07 05:23 PM

Removing rust stains in toilet
 
wrote in news:1188572298.793416.42670
@o80g2000hse.googlegroups.com:

Muratic acid worked wonders for my vintage 1950 toilet. Looked like
new I was done. Stuff from the grocery or department stores was too
week for me.


This is my second response. I didn't see yesterday's today.

I've used this in town where I didn't have a septic tank - works
extremely well. But I am afraid it would kill the bacteria in my septic
tank this time.




--
Every silver lining has a cloud.





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:53 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter