Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I personally don't use Simple Green as an APC. I would stick with something a little safer like Meguiar's APC+ or Optimum Power Clean. You can still use Simple Green to help clean engines and wheel wells thoughJust my opinion.
for me simple green just didn't work very well. This combined with the smell led me to try alternative products which clean much more efficiently and cost effective..
Simple green will attack and corrode any aluminum that's not painted or coated...
Replying to an old thread! Curious why some of us think Simple Green is so corrosive? If you look at the SDS sheets of the more traditional APC's for detailing, almost all of them mention how caustic or corrosive they are. Heck, Meguiar's D101 has the same NFPA health hazard rating at Wheel Brightener (insane to me)...but we all refer to these traditional APC's as "safer". I find it interesting. Check out Simple Green's SDS sheet next time you get the chance. No mention of corrosiveness to metals or being caustic, and has a health hazard rating of 0! It's even listed on the EPA's Safer Choice product list
Simple Green is a safe, pH neutral cleaner that works very well for general dust, scuffs and dirt. In concentrate, it has a pH range of 8.5-9.2. Diluted 10:1 the pH goes down to 7.95 if we assume an original value of 9.0. I would use it on some delicate surfaces of interiors. The lemon scented version is more pleasant than the green version.
Replying to an old thread!
It comes from people's experience using the product.
From what I've read it's not as safe as you'd think. And not as material compatible as you'd expect.
I had Simple Green discolor aluminum valve covers, an intake manifold, and a few brackets. My personal experience.
This thread brings up something I've not understood, perhaps one of you do... but we generally think of degreasers being alkaline - the more alkaline the stronger (to the point of corrosive), the closer to neutral the lighter duty but safer.
But the trend seems to be towards citrus-based degreasers, and lemons and other citrus fruits are acidic.
Is the citrus thing just a marketing gimmick or a smell/odor imparted? Or are these degreasers actually more on the acidic side?
Or is citrus being used to bring a strongly alkaline formula closer to neutral?