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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which
are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! |
#2
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On Thursday, 4 October 2018 11:26:38 UTC+1, Brian Gaff wrote:
If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? Best is a carpet cleaner. They suck the water out. I suspect you don't want the best though. The simplest for anyone without a cc is to use towels then bogroll, then fan dry it. The biggest problem is glue failure. May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. Heat is not what's wanted. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian Weird taste is not something we can help with in uk.d-i-y. NT |
#3
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Brian Gaff wrote
If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? You don’t need to do anything special after using a carpet cleaners. May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, Not if you dry it well. but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it Yep. or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. Not a great idea with a full room carpet. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Works fine to use a proper rented industrial carpet cleaner. |
#4
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I put wet carpets outdoors over a climbing frame or similar, they need ventilation and sunlight
On Thursday, October 4, 2018 at 11:26:38 AM UTC+1, Brian Gaff wrote: If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! |
#5
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On 04/10/2018 11:26, Brian Gaff wrote:
If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? Been there with the T shirt, and have made some mistakes in the past (mainly over wetting when cleaning). It will only rot if left wet for months. People use old carpets on top of compost heaps and they don't rot for many months. Even if water has not been discovered for months and the carpet backing has a mild mould a wipe over of the backing with a rag damped down with bleach after first drying it out can save the carpet. Don't make the rag too wet or the bleach will wet the pile. May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, If the water from the central heating leak is relatively localised and clean or just slightly stained then as long as the leak is caught soon enough first let the carpet fully dry out and then shampoo it. Letting it thoroughly dry first may/will reveal a water mark around the edge of the area of the leak, especially visible if the carpet is one colour. The trick is not to wet the carpet too much when shampooing - try to just clean the pile without getting the backing wet/damp. You may have to do this multiple times letting the carpet dry between applications. but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. It depends on how much water and how the carpet is fitted. With a fitted carpet a rubber/foam type underlay may trap the water and its best to try and lift the carpet away from the underlay. This is easy with something like a radiator leak as only the edge of the carpet needs to be lifted. If the carpet is small then hang it out on the washing line or put over a radiator. In the past with a fitted carpet where a lot of clean water was spilled in the middle of carpet I have screwed in a self tapping screw into the carpet, attached a string to the screw and lifted the carpet perhaps half an inch away from the underlay. As for smell you may/will get a distinctive wet carpet (wet dog) type smell while it is wet and for some time after its dry. Once fully dry a spray with something such as Fabreeze. If you have lifted the carpet spray both sides, and the floor underneath, and let it dry again before restoring the original fitting. The final solution may also be down to the material the carpet is made from. I have some largish synthetic fibre rugs which I can take outside and clean with a hose pipe and soft brush to work in the shampoo. Draped over a garden bench they drip dry in 24 hours in rain free summer days. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#6
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On Thursday, 4 October 2018 11:47:14 UTC+1, wrote:
On Thursday, 4 October 2018 11:26:38 UTC+1, Brian Gaff wrote: If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? Best is a carpet cleaner. They suck the water out. I suspect you don't want the best though. The simplest for anyone without a cc is to use towels then bogroll, then fan dry it. The biggest problem is glue failure. May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. Heat is not what's wanted. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian Weird taste is not something we can help with in uk.d-i-y. Are you sure about that ? ;-) NT |
#7
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"Chris Hogg" wrote in message
... On Thu, 4 Oct 2018 11:26:31 +0100, "Brian Gaff" wrote: If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian Assuming you can't lift it and hang it up somewhere to dry, get some dry towels or flannels, put them down on the wet patch and tread on them. It may sound contradictory, but it brings the wetness up into the towel. After you've done that two or three times, moving the towel around a bit to expose a fresh dry part, repeat with a new dry towel. Finish off by repeating the process with sheets of kitchen roll, until they come up nearly dry. Then blow cool air over the damp patch of carpet until it's completely dry. It was my late wife's technique, and it always seemed to work very effectively. Also, if you happen to have a wet-and-dry vacuum cleaner or a carpet cleaner, you could use that to absorb the bulk of the water before going on to the towels and kitchen roll. Incidentally, don't use light-coloured towels with a dark carpet, as they may become stained with the dye from the carpet - or with dirt that inevitably gets into carpets. |
#8
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On 04/10/2018 11:26, Brian Gaff wrote:
I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian There's some nasty food poisoning bugs going round this year. Tends to cause lots of issues for fitted carpets. :-) |
#9
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Brian Gaff has brought this to us :
If a carpet of the normal house kind ie not one meant for a bathroom, which are designed to get wet, gets wet, how is the best way to dry it and stop it from rotting? May seem daft, and I know that if its polluted water from a naff central heating leak or a flood where more than just a bit of rain is involved its probably a throw it away job, but it was just that I do have the odd accident with fluids and wondered if simply using a fan heater on it or throwing it over a radiator might do the trick. I'm interested in stains and smell, in the main. Brian I used to look after a certain banking chain and the banks often had floods on carpets. Sometimes several inches deep in water. The usual procedure was get guys with pumps in, then industrial wet vacs, then several industrial dehumifiers, fans and heaters. Worst case, was a bank flooded by a burst pipe from the tenants floor above, a foot deep in the basement and that was out of operation for just one week. It went unnoticed for days, because of a Christmas break. |
#10
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Brian Gaff wrote:
a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! |
#11
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"Andy Burns" wrote in message
... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial fibre on foam backing) in the bathroom, and several houses that we've seen while house-hunting have had carpets. As long as it doesn't get wet, and as long as there's a mat round the washbasin and loo, and a mat for you to stand on when you get out of the bath, then it's fine. Nicer than standing on cold lino or tiles. But not as hygenic. |
#12
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On 04/10/2018 14:24, NY wrote:
"Andy Burns" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial fibre on foam backing) in the bathroom, and several houses that we've seen while house-hunting have had carpets. As long as it doesn't get wet, and as long as there's a mat round the washbasin and loo, and a mat for you to stand on when you get out of the bath, then it's fine. Nicer than standing on cold lino or tiles. But not as hygenic. I once helped a friend strip out a bathroom in a house he had recently purchased. A carpet had been fitted and the toilet then fitted on top of it. The smell of stale urine was present before the toilet bowl was released and when lifted off.......... Any fixed carpet anywhere near a loo is bad news. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#13
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On Thursday, 4 October 2018 15:00:33 UTC+1, alan_m wrote:
On 04/10/2018 14:24, NY wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial fibre on foam backing) in the bathroom, and several houses that we've seen while house-hunting have had carpets. As long as it doesn't get wet, and as long as there's a mat round the washbasin and loo, and a mat for you to stand on when you get out of the bath, then it's fine. Nicer than standing on cold lino or tiles. But not as hygenic. I once helped a friend strip out a bathroom in a house he had recently purchased. A carpet had been fitted and the toilet then fitted on top of it. The smell of stale urine was present before the toilet bowl was released and when lifted off.......... Any fixed carpet anywhere near a loo is bad news. Yes. If you get down close to clean around the bog it's remarkable where pee ends up. I can't imagine why but it often does. Maybe some people are just not housetrained. NT |
#14
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On 04/10/18 14:24, NY wrote:
"Andy Burns" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial fibre on foam backing) in the bathroom, and several houses that we've seen while house-hunting have had carpets. As long as it doesn't get wet, and as long as there's a mat round the washbasin and loo, and a mat for you to stand on when you get out of the bath, then it's fine. Nicer than standing on cold lino or tiles. But not as hygenic. We bought special bathroom carpet for our en-suite perhaps 12 years ago. It has lasted quite well, the pile tends to 'flatten' but we clean it with one of those carpet cleaning machines (a Vax thing) and it 'springs' back like new. It doesn't have an underlay or foam back so is quite 'firm' under foot. Otherwise it is fine. No sign of mold etc. If things like shampoo etc spill, it does stain. It was quite expensive compared to ordinary carpet. -- Smile for the camera ;-) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxyL2_38EsQ Remarkable Coincidences: The Stock Market Crashes of 1929 and 2008 happened on the same date in October. In Oct 1907, a run on the Knickerbocker Trust Company led to the Great Depression. |
#16
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#17
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Any truth in the story some office staff pee in a circle round their desk every morning?
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#18
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Brian Reay Wrote in message:
On 04/10/18 14:24, NY wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial fibre on foam backing) in the bathroom, and several houses that we've seen while house-hunting have had carpets. As long as it doesn't get wet, and as long as there's a mat round the washbasin and loo, and a mat for you to stand on when you get out of the bath, then it's fine. Nicer than standing on cold lino or tiles. But not as hygenic. We bought special bathroom carpet for our en-suite perhaps 12 years ago. It has lasted quite well, the pile tends to 'flatten' but we clean it with one of those carpet cleaning machines (a Vax thing) and it 'springs' back like new. It doesn't have an underlay or foam back so is quite 'firm' under foot. Otherwise it is fine. No sign of mold etc. If things like shampoo etc spill, it does stain. It was quite expensive compared to ordinary carpet & still stinks of **** around the bog. -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#19
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On 15/10/2018 10:38, Jim K wrote:
Brian Reay Wrote in message: On 04/10/18 14:24, NY wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: a carpet [...] meant for a bathroom Yuck! It's only in recent years that I've started to see bathrooms with lino or tiles. All my parents' houses have had carpet (usually artificial things like shampoo etc spill, it does stain. It was quite expensive compared to ordinary carpet & still stinks of **** around the bog. We have has carpeted bathrooms and toilets all our married life and never has one stank of ****. Mike |
#20
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If you need to dry the carpet or part of the carpet, then I recommend you use a vacuum cleaner, if you don't have a vacuum cleaner, you can find some tips in this article https://bestcleaneradviser.com/how-t...ithout-vacuum/ . These are really very good tips, on this portal there is a lot of information on how to clean more efficiently and not spend a lot of time and effort on it.
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#21
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On Monday, 30 September 2019 13:52:24 UTC+1, wrote:
If you need to dry the carpet or part of the carpet, then I recommend you use a vacuum cleaner, if you don't have a vacuum cleaner, you can find some tips in this article o . These are really very good tips, on this portal there is a lot of information on how to clean more efficiently and not spend a lot of time and effort on it. we have a joker |
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