Just: "Playing the Devil's Advocate":
What happens to the overall % of laurel sulfate, and its role in removing unwanted "fillers" from the intended vehicles' surfaces, when the totality of the
Erasure product is diluted by 50%?
(I'm presuming it's sodium laurel sulfate, which has many functions (dependent upon the Chemists' formulations) such as: Surfactant/detergent/foaming agent/dispersing agent, among others).
It just seems to me:
That if all of the ingredients in
Erasure were not equally diluted, by the same % (and therefore, IMO, the same "effectiveness") then the
Erasure product may take on characteristics of one ingredient over other ones...Rendering it into a different state/composition, rather than for its intended, and stated purpose.
I could be wrong in that premise, though.
But, afterall...When I dilute, for example...
A known % IPA/with some distilled or DI water,
I can rest assured of that diluted solvent product's 'ingredients' total dilution ratio. That can easily be interpreted, IMO, as to what "this solvent's effectiveness" then should be.
Note:
I'm not bashing
Erasure or anyone who uses it...Just genuinely curious about opinions on: Further diluting this
Erasure product.
Bob