Amazon has
90oz. Lysol Laundry Sanitizer Additive (Crisp Line) on sale for
$6.49 when you 'clip' the $2.98 off coupon on the product page and checkout via Subscribe & Save.
Shipping is free with Prime or on orders of $25 or more.
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Key Features- Kills 99.9% of bacteria like Staphylococcus Aureus & Klebsiella pneumoniae, simply add to rinse cycle
- Contains 0% bleach, works even in cold water
- Gentle on most fabrics including whites & colors
- Works in all standard & HE machines
No Longer Available:
- Amazon has 41-Oz Lysol Laundry Sanitizer Additive (Crisp Linen) for $3.95 when you 'clip' the $0.67 off coupon on the product page and checkout via Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders of $25 or more.
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For reference, we use Persil which handles food stains well, but most detergents seem to only cover up the smells--I remember Tide Sport had a good scent but didn't really clean up existing smells.
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For reference, we use Persil which handles food stains well, but most detergents seem to only cover up the smells--I remember Tide Sport had a good scent but didn't really clean up existing smells.
I noticed that if I soaked stinky garments longer in this Lysol solution and water, the odor comes off. The length of time to soak the clothes depends on the degree of stinkyness. The stinkier the clothes, the longer the soaking. I understand that not many people have time for this, but just wanted to share what worked for me.
Oh, and I use persil as detergent.
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This presented another 2 reasons why I stopped using this.
1. I went through 2 of the big bottles pretty quick using 2 capfuls per load.
2. Who even makes a machine with a 16 minute wet cycle rinse? The only way this was going to work was if I had my top-load machine from 2003 where I could just stop it in the rinse cycle and let it soak.
That is what lead me to question the real world sanitizing efficacy of this product.
Because I doubt 16 minutes is just an arbitrary number the Lysol folks just made up.
Most likely it was the lab tested soak kill-time required to achieve advertised sanitation.
I (and I imagine MANY others )could not follow the manufactures directions correctly given resources and time.
The thought of potentially breeding new strains of super-resistant pathogens on my clothing was enough to stop.
(People having skin issues? Maybe it's team of germs with newly aquireed super-powers from thier equivalent of a radioactive bath.) Or not. 🤷 ♂️
I'm not knocking anyone who chooses to use this.. just sharing my reasons I stopped.
~anonymous healthcare worker
For reference, we use Persil which handles food stains well, but most detergents seem to only cover up the smells--I remember Tide Sport had a good scent but didn't really clean up existing smells.