DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Cleaning White Plastic Lawn Chairs (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/592874-re-cleaning-white-plastic-lawn-chairs.html)

[email protected] July 3rd 17 04:46 PM

Cleaning White Plastic Lawn Chairs
 
On Thursday, May 27, 1999 at 12:00:00 AM UTC-7, Charlie Case wrote:
Does anybody have a good way to clean white lawn chairs that are made of
PVC-like material? They have become chalky from the sun and have black
speckles all over them.


I tried this on my resin chairs which were badly oxidized. Vinegar didn't do a thing. Neither did baking soda. What worked was a Brillo Pad and Barkeepers Friend with a lot of scrubbing. What was much easier was Clorox Pro Outdoor Bleach. (Sodium hypochlorite and Sodium hydroxide - generic brand $4/gallon). Hose off large dirt first. Wipe it on with a damp sponge. I wore nitrile or vinyl gloves with the cuffs duct-taped to rubber gloves. By the time I had two chairs wiped down with the viscous solution, the first chair was ready to wipe down with a Scotch Brite Pad (kept damp). Hose off. The solution will ruin clothing - wear old work cloths. Bad spots take 2 treatments. The chairs look almost new, except they are still a bit chalky. I rubbed the residue off with a plastic cleaner such as Armor All.

Art Todesco July 4th 17 12:34 PM

Cleaning White Plastic Lawn Chairs
 
On 7/3/2017 11:46 AM, wrote:
On Thursday, May 27, 1999 at 12:00:00 AM UTC-7, Charlie Case wrote:
Does anybody have a good way to clean white lawn chairs that are made of
PVC-like material? They have become chalky from the sun and have black
speckles all over them.


I tried this on my resin chairs which were badly oxidized. Vinegar didn't do a thing. Neither did baking soda. What worked was a Brillo Pad and Barkeepers Friend with a lot of scrubbing. What was much easier was Clorox Pro Outdoor Bleach. (Sodium hypochlorite and Sodium hydroxide - generic brand $4/gallon). Hose off large dirt first. Wipe it on with a damp sponge. I wore nitrile or vinyl gloves with the cuffs duct-taped to rubber gloves. By the time I had two chairs wiped down with the viscous solution, the first chair was ready to wipe down with a Scotch Brite Pad (kept damp). Hose off. The solution will ruin clothing - wear old work cloths. Bad spots take 2 treatments. The chairs look almost new, except they are still a bit chalky. I rubbed the residue off with a plastic cleaner such as Armor All.

I realize that the OP probably threw out the chairs by now (1999) but I
did find a product made specifically for that purpose in one of the big
box stores (many years ago too) that worked perfectly.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:56 AM.

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