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mildew on fabric

 
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cristalclear13



Joined: 19 Sep 2007
Posts: 363
Location: Southeast Georgia

PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 8:29 am    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

I have found another "bonus" (not) of living in this area of high humidity. I am seeing quite a bit of black mildew now on the inside of my plane. What will safely clean that off the fabric?

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Cristal Waters
Kolb Mark II Twinstar Rotax 503 DCSI Sept 2007 - sold Sept 2012
Private Pilot Aug 2008
ELSA Repairman for N193Y April 2008
Rotax 2 stroke maintenance April 2009
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JetPilot



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1246

PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 8:35 am    Post subject: Re: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

Flying more often will prevent it Wink

Mike


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 10:19 am    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

From what I have read, a solution of baking soda and water sprayed
on lightly will inhibit fungus and mold.
-Haven't tried myself though.
BB

On 3, Jun 2009, at 12:29 PM, cristalclear13 wrote:

Quote:

<cristalclearwaters(at)gmail.com>

I have found another "bonus" (not) of living in this area of high
humidity. I am seeing quite a bit of black mildew now on the
inside of my plane. What will safely clean that off the fabric?

--------
Cristal Waters
Kolb Mark II Twinstar
Rotax 503 DCSI


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Fran Losey



Joined: 21 Feb 2009
Posts: 61
Location: Boca Raton, FL

PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 10:55 am    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

While covering is the topic, has anyone had any experience with Oratex UL600? This product requires no secondary processes.....

Loseyf(at)comcast.net
---


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Dana



Joined: 13 Dec 2007
Posts: 1047
Location: Connecticut, USA

PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 1:39 pm    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

At 02:40 PM 6/3/2009, loseyf(at)comcast.net wrote:
Quote:


While covering is the topic, has anyone had any experience with Oratex
UL600? This product requires no secondary processes.....

There was a big discussion about Oratex on the homebuiltairplanes.com
forums not long ago. It's rather expensive, and the one guy who got some
samples said it has an unattractive (to him) dull finish. They're
apparently still developing the product line, but at the present it sounds
like one of those prodcts that's "not quite there yet".

-Dana
--
When Columbus came to America, there were no taxes, no debts, and no
pollution. The women did all the work while the men hunted or fished all
day. Ever since then, a bunch of idiotic do-gooders have been trying to
"improve" the place.


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PostPosted: Sun Jun 07, 2009 7:20 pm    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

In a message dated 6/3/2009 12:30:42 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, cristalclearwaters(at)gmail.com writes:
Quote:
I am seeing quite a bit of black mildew now on the inside of my plane. What will safely clean that off the fabric?

Cristal,

I've been having much the same problem. I hangar in one of those tent like instant garages and there is a lot of mildew and mold on the inside surface of the tent cover, which then seems to migrate onto the plane.  I recently found a product that cleans it off pretty good and also helps to prevent it from coming back.

DampRid. Available in a spray bottle (like a kitchen cleaner) in the paint department at Lowes and Home Depot. The label says it is safe to use on aluminum, glass, fiberglass, acrylic, pvc, vinyl, rubber, chrome, plastic and more. I first used it on the fabric/canvas tent cover and it cleaned it really good.  Then after seeing no ill effects on that, I began using it on my Kolb fabric. After about six months use I see no problems yet.

Bill Varnes
Original Kolb FireStar
Audubon NJ
Do Not Archive


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cristalclear13



Joined: 19 Sep 2007
Posts: 363
Location: Southeast Georgia

PostPosted: Mon Jun 08, 2009 4:20 am    Post subject: Re: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

WhiskeyVictor36(at)aol.co wrote:

DampRid. Available in a spray bottle (like a kitchen cleaner) in the paint department at Lowes and Home Depot.


Thanks Bill. I'll have to see if I can find some here.


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Kolb Mark II Twinstar Rotax 503 DCSI Sept 2007 - sold Sept 2012
Private Pilot Aug 2008
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beauford



Joined: 25 Apr 2007
Posts: 127
Location: Brandon, FL

PostPosted: Mon Jun 08, 2009 7:11 am    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

Miss Cristal:
Before you go spraying calcium chloride (damp-rid) on yer machine, you
might want to take a look at
the MSDS sheet for that particular solution... para 10 of the MSDS is
shown below...I invite your attention to the
last two sentences in the "Incompatibilities" portion.

I have had pretty fair luck using a half and half solution of
isopropyl alcohol and water on stits mildew... as near
as I can determine, it isn't corrosive to the airframe metals and does
not attack the polyfiber products.

Worth what ye paid fer it...
beauford
FF-076
Brandon, FL

-------------MSDS excerpt; Calcium chloride---------------------
10. Stability and Reactivity
Stability:
Stable under ordinary conditions of use and storage. Substance will
pick up moisture from the air and go into solution if exposed in open
containers.
Hazardous Decomposition Products:
Emits toxic chlorine fumes when heated to decomposition. May form
hydrogen chloride in presence of sulfuric or phosphoric acids or with
water at elevated temperatures.
Hazardous Polymerization:
Will not occur.
Incompatibilities:
Methyl vinyl ether, water, zinc, bromine trifluoride, mixtures of
lime and boric acid, barium chloride, and 2-furan percarboxylic acid.
Metals will slowly corrode in aqueous calcium chloride solutions.
Aluminum (and alloys) and yellow brass will be attacked by calcium
chloride.
Conditions to Avoid:
Incompatibles.
--------------------unquote ------------------------------


<cristalclearwaters(at)gmail.com>
WhiskeyVictor36(at)aol.co wrote:
Quote:

DampRid. Available in a spray bottle (like a kitchen cleaner)
in the paint department at Lowes and Home Depot.



Thanks Bill. I'll have to see if I can find some here.

--------
Cristal Waters
Kolb Mark II Twinstar
Rotax 503 DCSI


Read this topic online here:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 47274#247274


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 08, 2009 7:36 am    Post subject: mildew on fabric Reply with quote

Quote:
From the Poly Fiber manual Appendix H: Dealing with stains: To remove stains. First try good old Clorox laundry bleach. Work it in with a sponge the flush with lots of water.While the PF manual is dealing with fuel and bird stains, I've used dilute Clorox (or any generic bleach) to take black mold off wall board, stone, and dacron sail cloth. Chlorine kills everything, even housewives who mix it with ammonia to clean the toilet, so use it in a well ventilated area or have an air supply.


Rick

On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 9:38 AM, Beauford T <beauford173(at)verizon.net (beauford173(at)verizon.net)> wrote:
[quote] --> Kolb-List message posted by: "Beauford T" <beauford173(at)verizon.net (beauford173(at)verizon.net)>

Miss Cristal:
Before you go spraying calcium chloride (damp-rid) on yer machine, you
might want to take a look at
the MSDS sheet for that particular solution... para 10 of the MSDS is
shown below...I invite your attention to the
last two sentences in the "Incompatibilities" portion.

I have had pretty fair luck using a half and half solution of
isopropyl alcohol and water on stits mildew... as near
as I can determine, it isn't corrosive to the airframe metals and does
not attack the polyfiber products.

Worth what ye paid fer it...
beauford
FF-076
Brandon, FL

-------------MSDS excerpt;  Calcium chloride---------------------
10. Stability and Reactivity
 Stability:
 Stable under ordinary conditions of use and storage. Substance will
pick up moisture from the air and go into solution if exposed in open
containers.
 Hazardous Decomposition Products:
 Emits toxic chlorine fumes when heated to decomposition. May form
hydrogen chloride in presence of sulfuric or phosphoric acids or with
water at elevated temperatures.
 Hazardous Polymerization:
 Will not occur.
 Incompatibilities:
 Methyl vinyl ether, water, zinc, bromine trifluoride, mixtures of
lime and boric acid, barium chloride, and 2-furan percarboxylic acid.
Metals will slowly corrode in aqueous calcium chloride solutions.
Aluminum (and alloys) and yellow brass will be attacked by calcium
chloride.
 Conditions to Avoid:
 Incompatibles.
--------------------unquote ------------------------------

--> Kolb-List message posted by: "cristalclear13"
<cristalclearwaters(at)gmail.com (cristalclearwaters(at)gmail.com)>


WhiskeyVictor36(at)aol.co wrote:
>
>    DampRid.  Available in a spray    bottle (like a kitchen cleaner)
> in the paint department at Lowes and Home    Depot.
>


Thanks Bill.  I'll have to see if I can find some here.

--------
Cristal Waters
Kolb Mark II Twinstar
Rotax 503 DCSI




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http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=247274#247274












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