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Al-53 said:I do not know if the PH is really a concern more than the chemical thats is creating the pH drop or rise....
I mean lemon juice has a PH 2.2 but some other acids in that range may be more harmful....Toothpaste has a PH of 10 yet some products in that range may be harmful in your mouth....so to me the chemical causing the change in PH would be of a concern to me....
thats just my opinion....
AL
I'm in agreement with that....Al-53 said:I do not know if the PH is really a concern more than the chemical thats is creating the pH drop or rise....
I mean lemon juice has a PH 2.2 but some other acids in that range may be more harmful....Toothpaste has a PH of 10 yet some products in that range may be harmful in your mouth....so to me the chemical causing the change in PH would be of a concern to me....
thats just my opinion....
AL
sparkie said:Pure stuff is 7.42
10:1 is 7.23
Nica said:So um...um....what does it mean? Good? Bad?
Sorry electricity is my thing![]()
Thejoyofdriving said:I would like to get one of those probes, right now I use a wide range PH indicator, its cheap but not very accurate and it is affected by the color
of the solution.
Higher PH = more basic. Lower PH = more acidic
Usually soaps are basic (base is identified with "slipperyness"). The more basic the product is, basically the better it cleans. This is not always a good thing (could discolor the surface, dry out the surface, etc). The lower the pH is, the more acidic it is (most wheel cleaners will be acidic, to disolve the brake dust). Again, too acidic and you risk discoloring the finish, etching the surface, etc.