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How to Care for your Microfiber Towels


Junkman2008

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This question comes up often and I always have to go search for my post on the matter. Thus, I decided to create a thread just in case someone is searching for this information. :thumbsup:

 

 

How to Wash Microfiber Towels

 

First off, you only want to wash them in COLD water. DO NOT use a lot of soap. My towels never get very dirty or greasy because they are only used to wipe polish or wax from the car, thus I can use a gentle detergent like Woolite. You don't want to use the hash detergents like the stuff you use on your regular clothing. If your towels are a little dirtier than normal, let them soak in the washing machine overnight. Simply add the proper amount of Woolite to the washer, add the towels and fill the washer to the proper level. Use the gentle cycle to wash these towels. Allow the wash cycle to begin for 1 minute so that the Woolite has a chance to mix with the towels and then shut the washer down. Let it sit for as long as necessary (overnight if that's what you need, shorter times for towels not as bad), and then start the washer back up later.

 

DO NOT use any fabric softener of any kind! Do not use too much Woolite! Read the bottle, a little goes a long way. If 1x is good, 2x is worse in this case. Also NEVER. EVER, EVER wash these towels with any other article of clothing, especially bath towels and wash clothes. That will ruin them too.

 

After the wash, DO NOT DRY THEM IN A DRYER USING HIGH HEAT!!! (if you do, you may as well use them to check the oil because they are useless at that point). I don't use a dryer at all. I allow them to air dry. String up a clothes line in your garage or outside somewhere and buy some clothes pins (if you can find some, that's some old school equipment right there!). If fabric sheets are used with these towels, it will destroy them. That will cause them to start scratching the crap out of your car. Drying them in the dryer with too much heat will do the same thing, that why I tell guys never to machine dry them.

 

If you follow these rules, your towels will keep the consistency and softness that they had from day one. If you allow your wives or girlfriends to do this, trust me, they will screw them up unless they have read this. Don't assume that they know how to do this and don't let them tell you that they know what they are doing when it comes to microfiber. They do not own, nor have they probably ever owned a piece of material like this so they will not be aware of these requirements. Test them before you hand them over and see if they get it right. I guarantee they won't.

 

I just had a funny thought. I would love to see the look on some of your wives faces when you ask for some Woolite. lol.gif

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Why do you use cold water? I use warm but never hot, would hot be like boiling them, but just to long?

 

Thanks

 

I always say use cold water because different washers have different temperatures when you select "warm". Thus, to be on the safe side, I say use cold. Better safe than sorry.

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Great post AJ.

 

I'm guilty of using the dryer. My towels have to have been washed 30 or more times, each. Then dried in the dryer. They still come out feeling soft and new. No different than the ones sitting on the shelf, awaiting a new owner (new).

 

My used ones don't have the tags, but you get the idea...

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Considering that boiling them in water w/ vinegar is good to fluff them up, why is washing them in hot water a bad thing?

 

Also, is it ok to wash the MF with the Adams wash mitts?

 

Because there is not vinegar in your washing machine? I always keep microfiber with microfiber. I have never tried putting my Adam's wash mitt in there.

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So how is it that hot water + vinegar = good but hot water alone is not??

 

Well, that would be one question for a chemist, which I am not. I never knew about the vinegar trick until I saw it here. I do know as everyone does that hot water can shink stuff and make it hard. The vinegar must counteract that. White vinegar has a whole bunch of uses. Just check it out on the web.

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Hot water typically helps break down old waxes and dried polishes in the towel - it's drying that would cause hardness and shrinking. I agree cold water and no drying would be optimal but might not clean as best. I'd just meet in the middle, warm water and no drier. It's what I do with my MF towels :)

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Hmm...

 

I have always used warm or hot water, regular laundry soap, and I put vinegar in the fabric softener or bleach area... All on the delicate cycle of course. Then they go in the dryer on low heat delicate cyclone...

 

Today I tried something different... I sprayed down the bad areas with APC first and let that sit a couple minutes, then washing them with cold water and regular detergent. They were really dirty though. Going to see how they come out, May go back to my old routine of warm/hot with vinegar though.

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What do people soak your really dirty towels in before you wash them?

 

Your microfiber towels should only be used to remove polish or wax, so they should never get "really dirty". If they do, you may want to retire that towel from paint duty. I have found that soaking mine overnight in the washing machine before I wash them with Woolite makes them come out looking brand spanking new.

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Your microfiber towels should only be used to remove polish or wax, so they should never get "really dirty". If they do, you may want to retire that towel from paint duty. I have found that soaking mine overnight in the washing machine before I wash them with Woolite makes them come out looking brand spanking new.

 

I do the same thing: soak them for a few hours in a 5 gallon bucket with some microfiber detergent. The ones that don't come completely clean get relegated to door jamb duty or used on cars of people I don't like :lol:

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