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Oxiclean

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rohanski

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Location
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I have heard some people use Oxiclean to degunk their carboys before sanitizing. How much should I use per gallon?
 
I'm not sure the exact amount. The only time I use it is at 15 gallons at a time and I use a full scoop for that. I think it is something like 2-4 tablespoons/gallon which I believe is the same for PBW. Guess I use the 2 Tbsp per gallon or less, but I let it sit overnight not the 30-60 minutes. If I used 4 Tbsp per gallon I would probably only let it set an hour or two max. I use it on stainless so glass I bet you could leave it longer. I love oxyclean and am still debating which works better, it or PBW.

On a side note, I have been using oxyclean in my dishwasher as of late and it works great.
 
As much as it takes. I use different amounts depending on what I'm cleaning. I might throw a couple tablespoons into 5 gallons, or I might throw more than that into just 1 gallon. I never measure, just eyeball it - use it a few times and you'll have a feel for it - if you try cleaning something and it's not working well, try adding more oxyclean. If you use a fair amount of it you should see it sort of bubbling and churning, and it should take off most gunk with just a long soak and a rinse.

"Just a scoop" isn't very specific, the small jar of oxyclean I got had a tiny scoop, and one scoop full was about right for 5 gallons in most cases, but the big tub I got has a huge scoop which is way more than I've ever used for 5 gallons.
 
I would consider 4tbsp/gallon way too much but that's just my opinion.

Also letting it sit longer than required can leave deposits and it is not effective after time.
My scoop is around 1-1.5tbsps. And that does me for a 6.5 gallon carboy with warm water and around 2 hours.
 
Orfy I agree, I went back to look at my written down numbers. I was way off so let me re-do. :( Sorry, I am such a dumb-ass sometimes and being dyslexic doesn't help at all. (Dyslexics of the world, UNTIE!!!!!!!!, lol)

I just measured a "scoop" of oxyclean (I know scoops are different sizes) and Orfy is way right. It measured to 1-1/8oz per scoop (or 2.25 Tbsp). That means I use way less for 15 gallons than the similar PBW ask for at 1 oz per 5 gallons. Mine actually works out to .15 tbsp per gallon. It cleans great at that strength at 1 hour contact time at 160*F. I really am bad with numbers so I had to write all this down, and I just look at my sheet when I need to use chemicals. I am surprised though by how little I really use.

Sorry for the misinformation earlier. I just know I use a "scoop" for my sanke keg kettle and tuns, and it works for me.
 
I put one scoop in my 6.5 gal glass carboy last night, added cool water, and today it's barely soiled!
 
Hey guys, the local big box stores I check out didn't have it. Where would you recommend finding it?
 
I got a big tub of OxiClean Free from Target for around $6. It is in the isle with the laundry detergent.
 
I found that I don't have to put more than 1/2-3/4 scoop per carboy. I found if you do a full scoop you may have residual white oxy-cake on the out side of the carboy from the foam over. And maybe it is because I fill it almost full.
 
definitely use the unscented (oxiclean free). if the fragrance they use can withstand oxiclean, i wonder what could possibly be in it? i bought some fragranced stuff for my laundry and it made my SWMBO break out in hives, but i dip my hands in the free stuff all the time and never have any trouble.
 
The "Dollar Tree" has something called Totally Awesome Oxygen for---yep $1 per container. it is fragrance free and it works great.
It doesn't have any dust like OxyClean has (which irritates the heck out of the old nose!)

Use a 1oz scoop and let sit a few hours.
 
LOL, I am actually still using the first big-huge tub we bought when Wal-Mart first starting carrying it. It is just called Oxy/Clean, but I assume it is the unscented since it really has no scent. Also it says you can use it on coffee makers right on the bucket, so I assume, but it has a few blue crystals in it???? Maybe it is just because it is so old??? I dunno, I used it to clean out our drinking-water bottles the other day and filled them with RO water. They all tasted like clean water, so I will use this bucket up and then have to look for Oxy/Clean Free the next time, lol.

I owned a bad ass 1992 K5 Full-size Chevy Blazer once, and the exact same truck in 1993 was called a frickin' Tahoe. I have never understood why products come out with a "so-and-so PLUS", lol. Why don't they just start making the original product to the new standards????? LOL I do understand the blazer thing though..... I miss my truck :(
 
I do have to say that oxyclean worked awesome on cleaning my bottles that were donated to me by people I know, they were VERY dirty and a soak in oxy overnight in a cooler with hot water and viola there clean.
 
adx said:
I got a big tub of OxiClean Free from Target for around $6. It is in the isle with the laundry detergent.

Ditto for me. Its all I use and have been using for many months. It also works well for removing labels off bottles...:rockin:
 
I finally tried oxiclean and it is great. I have used PBW and brewvint cleanitizer and the oxiclean was way better. I used it to take off some real gummy nasty labels. It got rid of almost all the gummy stuff the others left behind. Some other labels with regular glue fell right off in less than 1 hour. It worked great on my krausen gunked carboy. I'm going to check all the 99 cent/$1 stores in my area.
 
For what it's worth....The main ingredient (Sodium Percarbonate) in Oxyclean is the same active ingredient that is found in One Step sanitizer. Oxyclean is just not as pure. For whomever may be interested, you can buy 100% pure Sodium Percarbonate from "The ChemistryStore.com" for $4.50 for a 2 lb. jar. I've been getting it from them for about a year now. The stuff works great and also there is no undissolved, powdery residue floating around either.
 
I pretty much know the answer, but hey, ask away right?

Oxiclean would be the best bet for cleaning primary fermenters and carboys after use as opposed to residue leaving antibac soap or just hot water?

Didn't want to have soap residue, so we scorch the primaries w/ hot water only.
 
Oxiclean needs a few good rinses after use, but I think it leave less residue than soap. I am also paranoid about using anything too soapy or harsh on my equiptment.
 
Oxyclean works great with plastic fermenters, and I've used it in the past to clean my All-Clad pots, with no effects on the stainless. With the fermters just make sure you rinse it well before using them again.
 
Hey Macs, thanks for the info. I was just going to post "is oxi clean the same as one step?. It's also good to know that its not pure, so I guess you couldn't use it as a direct replacement for one step? Anyone know the answer to this? I also wanted to know if it was possible to keep one-step in a 5 gal bucket to reuse a couple of days later? The stuff isn't real cheap. I use Straight-A one step.
 
Is Oxyclean the same as B-Brite?
Not the same, but same product with different name/packaging?
 
Oxyclean has two ingredients. sodium percarbonate which was stated earlier in this thread, and sodium bicarbonate. (baking soda) I don't know the percent of each.

I don't think you should use it after a few hours. I believe I read somewhere it was 10 hours.
 
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