Sodium hypochlorite

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

PhilipL

Established Member
Joined
3 Sep 2005
Messages
175
Reaction score
62
Location
Central Edinburgh
In NI where I lived till recently every builders' yard sold 20l containers of sodium hypochlorite. It is used for cleaning paving etc. when mixed with water. A very cheap and effective "solution".

I am now in Edinburgh and none of the builders supplies I have called have even heard of it. Any idea where I can get my hands on it?

Philip
 
Called up a couple of places who do cleaning supplies and they have never heard of the stuff. Very odd - it is so easy to get across the Irish Sea.

Ps: it is used in swimming pools but can't find a supplier for them.
 
Last edited:
It is used for cleaning paving etc. when mixed with water..

Ring some of the local patio cleaning/jetwashing companies and ask from where they buy it. Make up a plausible story beforehand.
 
Is sodium hypochlorite not just bleach without the perfume, instead of builders look for cleaning material suppliers.
Just so! Commercial bleach is a solution of sodium hypochlorite (usually about 3 to 5% by weight) plus detergents so it reaches the parts that... well you get the idea, and gelling agents so it sticks to those parts and a bit of perfume so it doesn't just smell of chlorine.
 
What I know is that sodium hypochlorite added to a pail of water and washed onto a surface works. Putting normal bleach on paving slabs doesn't.
 
A neighbour recommended a product called wet and forget.

He reckons it does the same job but slower and without the damage and pollution.
 
I worked for a Scottish Chemical company in Manchester......
U could just wonder in and buy a 5 gallon drum of it...
so look at chemical suppliers wholesale.....cheap as chips....or was....
 
Edinburgh is not a great place to get materials. Belfast, where I lived, was much better for all kinds of things. Edinburgh just doesn't have a history of engineering or agriculture. Easier to buy a good violin or cello here than a tool.

On alternatives, I think most of these are based on 'chlorus' as a friend calls sodium hypochlorite. But much more expensive. Like boat cleaners based on oxalic acid - using a cheap base in an expensive product to do the same thing.
 
In NI where I lived till recently every builders' yard sold 20l containers of sodium hypochlorite. It is used for cleaning paving etc. when mixed with water. A very cheap and effective "solution".

I am now in Edinburgh and none of the builders supplies I have called have even heard of it. Any idea where I can get my hands on it?

Philip
Janitorial or chemical suppliers in your area would be a search idea
 
What I know is that sodium hypochlorite added to a pail of water and washed onto a surface works. Putting normal bleach on paving slabs doesn't.
What is the concentration of sodium hypochlorite in the product you use?
 
Widely available in Cumbria at farmer’s supply stores- used for cleaning dairy milking parlours.
 
Try 'milk stone cleaner'. It is the same stuff, near enough. I understand your point about 'Norn Iron' vs Edinburgh. My daughter lives there and the supplies available in even big 'yards' is totally different from 'oor wee place'. There is a fairly good B&Q just off the ring road. Try their online search function to see if "Patio cleaner" is available with them.
 
In NI where I lived till recently every builders' yard sold 20l containers of sodium hypochlorite. It is used for cleaning paving etc. when mixed with water. A very cheap and effective "solution".

I am now in Edinburgh and none of the builders supplies I have called have even heard of it. Any idea where I can get my hands on it?

Philip
Hi haven’t read all the posts but you will get it at a farm supply depot, widely use in the industry
 

Latest posts

Back
Top