Powerstone Pumice via Amazon [amazon.com] has
Powerstone Pumice Stone Toilet Bowl Cleaner w/ Handle for Limescale & Hard Water Stains on sale for
$9.59. Shipping is free w/ Amazon Prime or on $25+
Product Description from Store- Simply rinse and store in the convenient case. Includes air vents to allow drying.
- Power through calcium deposits, limescale, hard water rings, iron deposits, rust stains, and more on toilet bowls, tubs, sinks, tile and other porcelain and ceramic surfaces
- Tough enough to remove stubborn stains yet is chemical-free, odorless, non-toxic and eco-friendly
- Includes a heavy-duty plastic handle to easily grip while cleaning
- The fine-grit, white pumice stone leaves behind no residue on surfaces or on your hands.
- Also cleans baked-on food from BBQ grills, dirt and grime from gardening tools, rust from workshop tools, as well as other surfaces
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What's the different between OP and this one for $5 (2-pack)??
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product...V7R6A
- Make sure you soak/wet the stone before use
- Try to work with a wet edge and at an angle complementary to the surface
In particular, this product is a sort of OG "magic eraser" melamine foam sponge without the environmental implications of plastic microparticles.(you're trying to run the stone across the surface and not into the surface, if that makes any sense).
However, if you're shopping for a solid price on such an item I'd recommend shopping for the Pumie Scouring Stick (a plain bar of pumice) which is typically available at the 99 Cent Store chain (for 99 cents) or for about $2 at your local Wal-Mart.
Good luck!
Jon
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Good luck!
Jon
If it is REALLY bad it might take a few applications and take a bit of effort, but the limescale will come off in one hard sheet.
You can also add it to the toilet tank so when you flush it can work it's magic on the all the holes that the water goes through around the rim.
When I moved into my current house there was a brown stain in the bottom of the toilet that kept getting worse no matter how many different cleaning products I tried. Someone told me it was limescale so I tried CLR and Limeaway, neither worked. I forgot who told me or where I read it, but someone suggested using citric acid powder. Trust me, it works. I use a little bit in every load of my dishwasher, soak my showerheads and faucet aerators, and run some through my coffee maker every once and a while.
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