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Fiber ID: Critical for successful cleaning by Jeff Cross A dedicated professional cleaner has the desire to increase skills. This is especially so when it comes to carpet and upholstery care. Before beginning any textile cleaning project, it is important to plan your cleaning procedure.
Fiber identification plays a crucial role in this.
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However, it is safer to inform your customer of your intentions.
If it pulls away from the heat, it is synthetic. If it doesn't, it is natural.
If you get a noticeable residue on your fingers, you have a natural fiber. The most popular natural fiber is wool. If you clean area rugs, you will find others, but that's another subject. With wool, you've probably learned how to clean with lower pH chemistry and to watch your moisture and heat. Wool, like all natural fibers, is much more sensitive to stronger chemicals than are synthetics. But just lumping all synthetics into one "easy-to-clean and use anything" category is dangerous. Nylon's characteristics There aren't many cleaning problems with nylon. It's definitely king of market share, although olefin and polyester are slowly gaining. With nylon, you will come across acid dye stains more often than with other synthetics. This means you will want a good reducing agent at hand. Today's 5th generation nylon has stain resistancy added, and using the wrong chemical can damage the effectiveness of that resistancy. Nylon also responds well to post-treatments of fabric protectors. Olefin and polyester also benefit from post treatment fabric protectors, but that application is mainly for soil resistance since these two fibers are inherently stain resistant. Olefin is chemically friendly Olefin is very chemical resistant (even chlorine bleach will not remove color from olefin fibers) and stain resistant, so the cleaning problems you will have will be do to its oleophilic nature and its characteristic of matting and crushing. You don't have the concerns with pH, removing stain resistancy, color loss and more. But you do have to worry about using high heat (such as an iron with stain removal) on olefin - typically occuring when a technician is faced with that occasional troublesome stain and wants to use heat-activated chemistry.
Polyester problems
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