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BFrey97147
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
In the past I have cleaned the vinyl floor in our bathroom around the base of
the toilet using damp paper towels and bleach. This past time, after removing
the paper towels, the entire area was yellow (the floor is pale blue). My
husband thinks the bleach ate through the top layer of the floor and ruined it
permanently. Does anyone know of any way to fix this? Right now the floor
looks awful! Many thanks! Beverly

Phisherman
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
On 23 Jul 2003 06:10:07 GMT, bfrey97147@aol.comnospam (BFrey97147)
wrote:

>In the past I have cleaned the vinyl floor in our bathroom around the base of
>the toilet using damp paper towels and bleach. This past time, after removing
>the paper towels, the entire area was yellow (the floor is pale blue). My
>husband thinks the bleach ate through the top layer of the floor and ruined it
>permanently. Does anyone know of any way to fix this? Right now the floor
>looks awful! Many thanks! Beverly

This sounds like you will need to replace the entire flooring (not too
difficult to do). Make sure to get a well-known brand such as
"Armstrong." I wonder if you applied the bleach full-strength and
left it for a long time and/or you have an off-brand flooring. In the
meantime, you can get by with one of those wrap-around commode rugs
and launder it weekly.

Gary V. Deutschmann, Sr.
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
You can get new sheet vinyl the size of most bathrooms for $5.00 to
$15.00 at most carpet & tile outlet stores.

If you have an old piece that fit perfectly, you can keep it as a
template and pre-cut the new one and swap them out quite often for
little to no cost or labor.

TTUL
Gary

The Other Harry
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
[On 23 Jul 2003 20:09:55 GMT, raiar@bbs.galilei.com.nospam (Gary V.
Deutschmann, Sr.) wrote:]

> You can get new sheet vinyl the size of most bathrooms for $5.00 to
> $15.00 at most carpet & tile outlet stores.
>
> If you have an old piece that fit perfectly, you can keep it as a
> template and pre-cut the new one and swap them out quite often for
> little to no cost or labor.

Your lack of permission notwithstanding, I'm re-posting this to
misc.consumers.frugal-living. It's simply too good to just let pass
by in the heat of the afternoon.

Harry ;)

Gary V. Deutschmann, Sr.
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
Fine with me Harry!

You might want to add, to only use the adhesive heavily at the doorway
entrance and behind the toilet where you get occasional drips.
A little caulking around the perimeter keeps it from curling or water
leaking under it.

Properly cleaning a worn bathroom floor takes about 2 hours, some
elbow grease and a lot of bending and costs about 2 to 3 bucks in
cleaning supplies, not to mention the toll on your aching back and
health from the cleaning fumes.

One can pull the old linoleum and slip in a new pre-cut (from
template) piece in under 45 minutes. Which includes, removal and
reinstallation of the toilet and the caulking.

You can also buy mill-ends of carpeting that just lays in place. A
slit from the back of the toilet to the wall is all it takes to have a
piece of carpet that you can remove and wash and/or switch out as the
mood hits.

Bathroom only measure normally 5 feet x 6 to 8 feet, carpeting can be
hung on a clothesline and washed down quite easily with the hose.

TTUL
Gary

Barbecue Bob
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
In article <3f204255.524861296@news.galilei.com>,
raiar@bbs.galilei.com.nospam (Gary V. Deutschmann, Sr.) wrote:

>
> Properly cleaning a worn bathroom floor takes about 2 hours, some
> elbow grease and a lot of bending and costs about 2 to 3 bucks in
> cleaning supplies, not to mention the toll on your aching back and
> health from the cleaning fumes.
>
Gary,
You may think it's fun to disparage our hobby, but some of us have
sensitive feelings, especially Phish.
--
Barbecue Bob serving family-style roast bunny
at convenient restaurants
from Montana to New Mexico

BFrey97147
06-08-2005, 07:38 PM
Thanks for the great ideas. The floor was a name brand, and I did dilute the
bleach, but think I left it on too long. My husband is willing to replace the
floor, but says it's a "winter project." Today I tried putting some white
stain around the toilet base and wiped off most of it. It hides most of the
stain and I'm happy with the results for now. I'll be able to wait until
winter, I think, for a new floor! Thanks again, Beverly