Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 664
Default Where is the stain coming from?

I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.

So it couldn't be pasta sauce. I have not even worn it yet.

It has to be from the washer or dryer. I looked and touched the inside of
my washer/dryer, nothing, I thought may be I would find a rusted part that
is staining the shirt, but I did not find any.

I was not using any bleach with the wash.

Any idea what could cause multiple spots of orangey stains?

Thanks,

MC


  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 149
Default Where is the stain coming from?

MiamiCuse wrote:

I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.

So it couldn't be pasta sauce. I have not even worn it yet.

It has to be from the washer or dryer. I looked and touched the inside of
my washer/dryer, nothing, I thought may be I would find a rusted part that
is staining the shirt, but I did not find any.

I was not using any bleach with the wash.

Any idea what could cause multiple spots of orangey stains?

Thanks,

MC


My guess is that you have iron in your water. Try adding something like
Super Iron Out along with your regular detergent in the washer.
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 209
Default Where is the stain coming from?

MiamiCuse wrote:
I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.


That'll do it.


Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.


I just checked. There are no orange stains on my keyboard. I'll watch it
closely for the next few days and report back if I find anything. I
admire your dedication to finding these spots, but I prefer that you
stay out of my house in the future.

TIA
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,009
Default Where is the stain coming from?

"MiamiCuse" wrote

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.


Snicker, I had black or brownish ones. It turned out to be caused by crud
build up in the water line to the washer. Since I only ran it about once a
week, it would just sorta sit there and cause that.

To fix it, eventually we ended up also replacing the washer because inside
the crud had built up and it was cheaper than replacing clothes but the main
thing we learned was to run the washer once while empty (no soap etc needed)
to clear the line, then with clothes.

We had other 'issues' with that piping that caused us to replace the lines
(or part of them). When they came out, the plumber was laughing at the crud
in there. It had been building up for years? We guessed that the last
owners before us use a landromat so they could do many loads at once (there
was one just 200 yards from the house and they had 5 people in the house so
would have taken less time).

I'm not saying your problem is the same, but it might be related to some
rusty joint someplace along the supply line to the washer or something that
isnt fully draining inside the washer and is rusty which on the next load
after it sat a bit, comes back up into the clothes?


  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,746
Default Where is the stain coming from?


MiamiCuse wrote:

I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.

So it couldn't be pasta sauce. I have not even worn it yet.

It has to be from the washer or dryer. I looked and touched the inside of
my washer/dryer, nothing, I thought may be I would find a rusted part that
is staining the shirt, but I did not find any.

I was not using any bleach with the wash.

Any idea what could cause multiple spots of orangey stains?

Thanks,

MC


Likely something in the water supply. Given the low cost of filters, if
you don't already have one I'd install a whole house filter at the water
supply to the house and use at least the basic sediment filters which
are cheap if you buy them by the case at a plumbing supply house. It
might take a few empty runs of the washer to clear remaining crud from
the lines. If need be, I'd even consider installing a pair of filters
directly at the washing machine, since it doesn't take much ruined
clothing to add up to the $50 or so it would cost.


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 157
Default Where is the stain coming from?


On Tue, 6 May 2008 01:01:45 -0400, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:

I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.

So it couldn't be pasta sauce. I have not even worn it yet.

It has to be from the washer or dryer. I looked and touched the inside of
my washer/dryer, nothing, I thought may be I would find a rusted part that
is staining the shirt, but I did not find any.

I was not using any bleach with the wash.

Any idea what could cause multiple spots of orangey stains?

Thanks,

MC

Check the washing machine itself for rust, most notably around the lip
of the door opening. The porcelan coating failed all around on mine
and dropped little rust pieces into the water while washing.

Disolved iron in water wont make red spots. It'll make the whole
garment dingy red. You need a solid rust particle to make spots. So
it could be something upstream in the water system that is shedding
rust specks, or as I said, the washing machine itself. I dont know
what brand you have but if its a top loader, see if you can pop the
top off and look around the upper rim of the wash basket for rust
particles.

-dickm

  #7   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 149
Default Where is the stain coming from?

dicko wrote:
Disolved iron in water wont make red spots. It'll make the whole
garment dingy red. You need a solid rust particle to make spots. So
it could be something upstream in the water system that is shedding
rust specks, or as I said, the washing machine itself.


Not true.

For example, check out the following:

http://www.goodhousekeeping.com/name...-huddy-fabrics

Excerpt:

"Textiles Director Kathleen Huddy answered questions on our Good
Housekeeping On Your Side message board on April 24. Read a few excerpts
below.

Rust Spots on Clothing

Q: I am having trouble with rust spots on my clothes after they're
washed. I've checked the washer and dryer drums for rust, but I don't
see anything. My white clothes are affected more than the colored
clothes. I've tried bleach and other treatments, but nothing seems to
help. I do have well water. Do you think this could have anything to do
with it? I also have a water softener. I'm willing to try any suggestion
you might have.
kitchensclosed

A: Well water sometimes contains high amounts of iron, which can cause
the rust spots. Try the RIT Dye Rust Remover. That should do the job.
It's sold at grocery stores in the cleaning section."
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,926
Default Where is the stain coming from?

On May 6, 12:01*am, "MiamiCuse" wrote:
I have little speck of brownish orange stains on my white shirts, and I
thought may be I was just sloppy when eating pasta.

Well I bought a brand new white shirt last Friday and washed it Sunday.
Before I wore it I noticed a few speck of small orange stains the size of
the letter "o" on your keyboard.

So it couldn't be pasta sauce. *I have not even worn it yet.

It has to be from the washer or dryer. *I looked and touched the inside of
my washer/dryer, nothing, I thought may be I would find a rusted part that
is staining the shirt, but I did not find any.

I was not using any bleach with the wash.

Any idea what could cause multiple spots of orangey stains?

Thanks,

MC


We had and old machine that was rusting at the top where you could not
see it, and did the same thing.
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Deck stain - Behr Semi-Transparent Stain with Nanoguard [email protected] Home Repair 10 February 25th 09 02:48 AM
Deck stain - Behr Semi-Transparent Stain with Nanoguard [email protected] Woodworking 0 July 27th 07 03:38 PM
Deck stain - Behr Semi-Transparent Stain with Nanoguard [email protected] Home Ownership 0 July 27th 07 03:38 PM
help needed matching cabinet stain to wall stain [email protected] Woodworking 3 January 4th 07 07:28 PM
wood stain, pre-stain, clear coat questions peter Home Repair 5 May 24th 05 08:51 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:43 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"