The following hints, tips advice, and instructions describe cleaning vinyl kitchen floors. Following these directions cleans spills, food, grease, and stuck on messes. They apply best to vinyl, linoleum, and ceramic floor surfaces.
If your floor is genuine wood however, these instructions still apply. But use less water to prevent warping and curling.
Be sure to wear non-skid shoes or slippers. The smooth, shiny surfaces of many floor styles these days, can become quite slippery when wet. We recommend rubber-soled shoes with small treads, for maximum surface area contact with the floor, and thus, minimum slippage potential.
You can remove tough stains, like tar, paint, and scuff marks. But this may require a high power cleaners like Goo Gone or Soft Scrub. In that case, be sure to test these cleaners first, an less visible floor areas. Some cleaners may mar the floor’s glossy finish or discolor it. Test in a closet or other, not readily seen area first. This keeps your product of choice from damaging much seen areas.
Once you apply the water and cleaner solution, try to avoid walking on the wet area anymore than necessary. This reduces the likelihood that you’ll slip and hurt yourself.
When the water becomes cloudy or dark in color, dump it, refill, and add cleaner to a fresh bucket full. Larger kitchen floors or those heavily soiled may require as many as six water changes for complete and thorough cleaning.
The cleaner we use, the Spic and Span multi-surface floor cleaner, claims to require no rinsing if diluted. But we still mop treated floors with fresh, clean water. This lowers chances of cleaner buildup and loss of floor shine.
Wet the floor for best loosening action of the cleaners. But do not FLOOD the place. A well wetted mop saturates a 3 Ft. X 3 Ft. square area.
If your kitchen floor is simply dusty with no sticky spots, then a mop soaked in plain water works well. We like to avoid using any chemicals if dirt is light.
It’s easiest to clean a floor that is free of furniture. Move away tables and chairs, rubbish, silverware, and old food boxes. Pick up anything that you can from the floor. Saves you much time and effort later on. This way, you won’t have to mop around things sitting there or move them out of the way while sweeping.
This step removes any loose dirt and dust. It also helps keep your bucket of soapy water (used later) cleaner, longer. You won’t need to dump and refill it as often if you sweep or vacuum the floor first. We find that the broom works best in this step. Use the vacuum cleaner and wand to suck up dirt and dry food bits. Go around corners and where the floor meets the wall.
Get hard stains out using the procedure below.
Thoroughly submerge the mop in the bucket, soaking it completely. Then, with the mop dripping wet, spread the water over the floor in 3 Ft. X 3 Ft. squares. Rewet the mop before moving to the next square.
Pausing allows the water to loosen any stubborn dirt.
This time, ring out the mop before using. You want to have it as dry as possible. That way, it soaks up the wash water from the last pass. Mop around the entire floor space, absorbing any water puddles. This step is done when the floor is left damp; not wet.
Repeat step 4 above, but use fresh, clean water instead of the detergent solution on the mop.
If you’re in no hurry, allow the floor to air dry on its own. This can take up to several hours. In this time, keep traffic low while it dries. This avoids injury from slipping on the wet spots. If though, you need faster drying, set up an oscillating fan that fires across the entire floor area. The fan can really reduce floor drying times by half.
But we find that the fastest way to dry the floor is to wipe it with large bath towels. Use retired towels bath towels. We lay the towel down on the floor. Then step on top of it. Finally, we slide around the room like you would on a snow slide.
These could be…
Typically, these would not come off just by damp mopping. Look for these nasty stains near stoves, refrigerators, and sinks.
Go around the kitchen with a bucket of warm to hot, clean water. Completely soaking any stains, grime, or dried-on foods you find. This re hydrates them, and eases wiping away after ten minutes or so.
For those dug-in stains and messes, you may have to…
The warm, moist air from the evaporating water in the rag, often unlocks stuck on grime.
Allow the water to work its way into these sticky or dirty areas. Most plant based food stains respond well to this treatment.
This step may require a bit of elbow grease, and that you get down on your hands and knees; thus, a kneeling pad comes in handy here. Scrub with the sponge, then try the brush if the sponge does not completely lift the grime. Repeat operating with a grease-cutting dish soap and water solution as needed. Or, for paint spots, try a shot of Goo Gone citrus cleaner. Be sure to spot test any cleaners you plan to try. Test them in non visible areas of the floor. Do not apply those to the “production floor” that cause discoloration or dulling of the finish.. Spare swatches of the same flooring are handy. So where possible, obtain some for your floor if you did not do so when the floor was installed.
Purchased the Mayfair 1B5109408 No Slam Commode Seat, #1B5109408, by Bemis Manufacturing Company, and we…
Purchased the No Slam Toilet Seat Mayfair Wooden 1B5109408 model, by Bemis Manufacturing Company, and…
Toilet seats today, with typical to moderate use and no abuse, rarely break or otherwise…
Toilet seats today, with typical to moderate use and no abuse, rarely break or otherwise…
Here, we show how to factory reset Alexa Echo Studio, to put it back to…
This post explains How to Connect Alexa Studio to WiFi. Plus, this routine works for…