I think that the problem with that product may have been those plastic beads.? In the last few years, micro-plastic not only have shown up in soil and water samples, but in farm animal flesh, and yes, in our own bodies. The health risks are not certain, yet, but our state govt errs on the conservative side there.
No,? this was something from a company I'd never heard of,? like a person's name but not a major brand of any kind.? Like maybe that was their only product.?
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On Mon, Mar 13, 2023, 4:52 PM Rangelov <rangelov@...> wrote:
Hey Nick,
You never answered if the industrial hand cleaner that I mentioned is the same stuff that you were looking for.
On Friday, March 10, 2023, 09:21:15 AM MST, <rangelov@...> wrote:
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Nick,
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It might been Kimberly-Clark (or Scott, same company now). Kimberly-Clark Professional Super Duty Hand Cleaner with Grit (no. 91388).? The grit was fine plastic beads.? The stuff WAS excellent hand cleaner.
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It really dissolves grease.? Rub into hands, rinse with a bit if water, keep rubbing, repeat.? Your hands look like you are an office worker when done.? Especially if you use a toothbrush, it is softer, gentler and gets at all the dirt.
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It is no longer available.? It had something in it that Californias law concerning cancer causing chemicals was identified.
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91388 was used at Ford, where I worked at one time.? I got some thru the rep that supplied Ford and from a local industrial supply house that was swallowed up by Grainger (and now I cannot buy from them).
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I used to buy it in 4 one gallon cases (with pump on each gallon).? I still have a gallon or two left.? I use it sparingly, since there is no more left, anywhere else.
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Regards, Dimitar
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1a.
OT Maybe? Hand cleaners
From: Nick Andrews
Date: Thu, 09 Mar 2023 14:54:31 PST
A while back, okay almost 20 years ago, a friend worked at Jorgenson Steel in Denver.? You know how that mill oil on steel is...?? He and I and a roommate started a floor cleaning business and did the floors there at night.? They had a hand cleaner in the locker rooms that from what I recall was a green powder, not a liquid, and it worked with or without water and did not leave your hands slippery, greasy or stinky at all.? I'd forgotten about it until recently and cannot recall the name but it was amazing.? Anyone have any ideas on what it might be and if it's even still made?? It was not a typical household brand, more like an industrial supply type product you'd never see on a store shelf.