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Sebastian Florida Carpet Cleaning & Carpet Cleaners




 

 First Class Carpet Cleaning
Sebastian Florida

(772) 581-4170

We Promise You the
Absolute Cleanest Carpets 
At the Guaranteed 
BEST PRICE in Sebastian!


 

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Sebastian Florida Carpet Cleaning & Carpet CleanersSebastian Florida Carpet Cleaning & Carpet Cleaners
Safe & Effective
Carpet Cleaning

If your family resides in the Sebastian Florida area and you need your carpets cleaned, no matter who you choose to use - we respectfully urge you to make sure the company you choose uses cleaning products that are safe for your family and safe for the environment. 
If you don't know who uses safe chemicals or which chemicals are the safest to use, then please call us.  We'll provide you with a list of all the information you need to figure out which chemicals are safe and which ones aren't.  And if the company you choose to do the work isn't cooperative in utilizing the safest chemicals available - then call us and we'll do the work for the price that they were going to do it for.  We may even charge less then they planned to.  After all, First Class Carpet Cleaning is the Treasure Coast's ONLY Discount Carpet Cleaning Company!
What's most important is that we leave the inside of our homes AND the outside - as safe as humanly possible for our children, for our community and for the future. Toxic chemicals are often used in cleaning products that harm the person using them as well as the people who occupy the home or building afterwards.  First Class Carpet Cleaning of Sebastian pays special attention to the chemicals we use to perform every job.  We use the mildest, most effective products available and assure you that once we're finished cleaning your carpets, they're not only professionally cleaned, they're also safe and free of chemical residues that can harm your family. Thank you so very much for working with us in making conditions optimally safe for everyone now and in the future.
Toxic chemicals are often used in cleaning products that harm the person using them as well as the people who occupy the home or building afterwards.  First Class Carpet Cleaning of Sebastian pays special attention to the chemicals we use to perform every job.  We use the mildest, most effective products available and assure you that once we're finished cleaning your carpets, they're not only professionally cleaned, they're also safe and free of chemical residues that can harm your family.

If you choose a company other than First Class Carpet Cleaning of Sebastian, please make sure they use chemicals that are safe and free of harmful chemicals that may cause injury or worse to your family.

Remember,
carpets that are cleaned less often require much stronger chemicals that do carpets that are regularly maintained. It is a good strategy to set up a maintenance program that takes care of your carpet needs throughout their useful life.  Also, carpets that have a regular maintenance program last almost 100% longer than those that don't.
 
Ask your First Class Carpet Cleaning representative about a discounted regular maintenance program for cleaning your carpets to help prolong their useful life.  Start experiencing the savings of replacing your carpets a lot less often today.

Web Page Produced by Reverof Bed Sevol Luap - Online Marketing - All Rights Reserved.
 
 

Most carpet care products are relatively safe to use, and have only a small impact on the environment. However, some products do contain toxic chemicals that are harmful both to the cleaner who uses them and to people who occupy the building afterwards.  It is best to select the mildest products you can find that work effectively.

Also, carpets that are cleaned less often require more and stronger chemicals that do carpets that are regularly maintained. It is a good strategy to set up a maintenance program that takes care of carpet needs throughout their useful life.

Using the wrong products or excess amounts of chemicals can easily damage carpets. Therefore, a successful maintenance program will feature the products suited to the work, and will thoroughly train cleaners in proper cleaning methods.


Use mild products for regular daily cleaning.

Use stronger products only for weekly deep cleaning.

Avoid ingredients that are poisonous or that harm the environment.

Wear protective gloves and goggles when mising or using any cleaning products.

A successful carpet care program begins before installation, and then continues with routine vacuuming, maintenance cleaning, and periodic restoration efforts.

Carpet Design & Installation

Carpets are both functional and visually appealing. However, the wrong kind of carpet, or one that is poorly installed will require extra maintenance.

Generally you should match the carpet type, texture, and underlayment to its working environment. It is also important to keep carpets away from situations where water, chemicals, or other hard-to-clean materials are used. For example, locker rooms, kitchens, and copy centers are not good places to install carpet.

In addition, it’s essential to consider how nearby, non-carpeted floors or walls will be cleaned. Chemicals used for that kind of maintenance can easily spill over and damage carpets.

Dust Prevention

Preventing soil from entering a building in the first place means carpet cleaning can be less frequent, thereby reducing the amounts of chemicals used.

Large, frequently cleaned walk-on mats should be placed at each high-traffic building entrance. These mats should be large enough to capture several footsteps. Experiment with different sizes and textures to see what works best at each doorway. Every few days these mats will become “full” of soil. Therefore, it’s important to vacuum all doorway mats frequently so that they will continue to capture soil before it is carried into the building.

Some modern buildings are totally enclosed. If possible, the heating, ventilating, and air conditioning system in such a building should be operated so that the air pressure just inside each doorway is higher than that of the natural air outdoors. Doing so will push airborne dust back outside.

Vacuuming

Daily vacuuming with strong suction, tight filter, rotating brush machines removes up to half or more of the soil that falls onto carpets. How much effort does it take to attain this level of cleaning? Routine vacuuming, with up to four back and forth strokes of the wand across the carpet, is sufficient for low traffic areas. Up to ten wand strokes may be needed at outside doorways and other high traffic areas. Supplemental vacuuming will be needed along walls and carpet edges where soil tends to accumulate.

Other Prevention Techniques

Some building managers prohibit colored soft drinks, coffee, and other items that will easily stain carpets. Such a tight policy makeS building occupants unhappy at best. A compromise is to either to have hard floors instead of carpets in food service rooms, or to place sacrificial carpet mats in those areas.

It helps to think of carpets as large, flat air filters. Most light particles and airborne soil will eventually end up attaching to carpets. Unless something is done, significant amounts of carpet soil will come from kitchen fumes and other forms of building use. Properly maintained vents that exhaust outdoors can capture most materials that will otherwise fall out onto the carpets.

Carpet Spotters

Another form of prevention comes from reacting immediately to spills and spots before they have time to become semi-permanent stains. However, thorough training in spill clean-up is very important because using the wrong techniques or chemicals can smear the spilled substance or set the spot permanently. It is usually best to start with clear, cold water and blotting cloths, and then move on to try stronger chemicals only if needed.

A special word of caution - carpet spot removal products contain some of the most dangerous chemicals found in carpet care products. Use these products sparingly, and only when wearing gloves and goggles. Provide extra ventilation, and if possible do the work when building occupants are elsewhere. In any case, avoid products that have highly dangerous ingredients such as hydrofluoric acid (rust remover), or tetrachloroethylene (Type 4 spot remover).

Maintenance Cleaners

Rotary bonnet cleaners and carpet shampoos usually are fairly mild products. However, it’s easy to misuse or over-apply these maintenance cleaners. Such improper use may make it necessary to do hot water extraction more often or more extensively. Either way, the use of excess chemicals or the wrong ones leads to more effort and expense.

The toxic ingredients that are in maintenance cleaners pose their greatest risks through inhalation (e.g., isopropanol) or skin contact (e.g., butoxyethanol or ethanolamine). Therefore, providing good ventilation and wearing gloves are very important to protect the janitor doing the work. It is also important to keep building occupants away from wet, freshly cleaned carpets so as to reduce their exposure to these chemicals.

Extractants

With some exceptions, presprays used with hot water extraction systems are also fairly mild products. Careful application, thorough agitation, sufficient contact time, and extraction before drying help these products do their job, and reduce the amounts of chemicals that would otherwise have to be used in reworking the carpet. Training and experience are needed to prepare the janitor for using these products effectively.

Hazardous ingredients used in hot water extraction products include acid rinses (e.g., hydroxyacetic acid) and solvents (e.g., butoxyethanol). The best strategy is to choose products without these problem ingredients. If that is not possible, than it is essential that the janitor wear gloves and goggles, and that building occupants are kept away from the area until the work is complete.

Mildewcides & Disinfectants

A few restoration products contain tributyl tin, formaldehyde, and other ingredients that are meant to kill microorganisms, but at the same time are highly toxic to humans. Some of these ingredients, such as tributyl tin, are banned from use in the San Francisco Bay Area because of their potential to cause harm in the environment.

Important Safety Tips

Use stronger chemicals sparingly and carefully to avoid harming the user or building occupants. Be sure that each janitor is well trained, and if possible, have your people work in buddy teams when using stronger chemicals.

Right Corrosive chemicals (acids or caustics) can blind you in seconds.
Always wear goggles to protect your eyes.
Right Corrosives can also damage your skin and leave scars.
Wear gloves to protect your hands.
Right Some poisonous chemicals absorb through your skin.
Always wear gloves when using products containing glycol ethers or ethanolamines.
Right Some poisonous chemicals are easily inhaled.
Be sure that your work area has enough ventilation.
Right Mixing different products together can create poisonous chemicals.
Avoid mixing products, and be sure to rinse out work buckets after each use.

Carpet Cleaning Ingredients

Manufacturers make several products for carpet cleaning. These products range from mild to strong, and have many different ingredients. Some of these cleaning products have acids and other chemicals that can harm you.

The following table lists chemical ingredients commonly found in strong carpet cleaners. Some are relatively safe if you wear gloves and goggles, while others are so risky that you should not use them. In addition, there are some chemicals that may be relatively safe to a janitor wearing gloves and goggles, but that can harm the environment.


Do Not Use - Severe Health Risk

Hydrofluoric Acid
Nitrilotriacetate / Nitrilotriacetic acid
Perchloroethylene / Tetrachloroethylene
Tributyl Tin

Use Extreme Care or Avoid - Health Risk To Janitor

Butane, Isobutane, or Propane (aerosol propellants)
Ethanolamines
Glycol Ethers (such as butoxyethanol)
Quaternary Ammonium Chloride
Sodium Bisulfate
Sodium Carbonate
Sodium Hydroxide

Avoid if Possible - Will Harm The Environment

Dibutyl Phthalate
CFC-22 (Now illegal for janitorial use)
HCFC-141 (Now illegal for janitorial use)
Nonyl Phenol Ethoxylate
Octyl Phenol Ethoxylate

Sewer districts prohibit discharges of some of these chemicals, such as phenol, tetrachloroethylene, and tributyl tin, as well as acids or bases that are corrosive (having a pH less than 4-5 or greater than 11-12). Avoid products that make your sewer discharge illegal. In the San Francisco Bay Area it is illegal to discharge any cleaning materials or wastewaters onto the ground or street.

Where to get more information

Here are four ideas for obtaining more information about the health and safety risks of the cleaning products that you use:

1. Read the product label and carefully follow the directions it gives for safe use.

2. Get a material safety data sheet for each product you use. Look for a phone number on the container label and contact customer service at the manufacturer. Or ask the store where you got the product.

Read each material safety data sheet when you get it - don’t wait for an accident. Focus on the risks the product presents to the user. Look for the personal protective gear that the supplier recommends.

3. Contact either your county health department or local sewer agency. Staff of these organizations can answer health, safety, and environmental questions that you have.

4. Search the Internet. You can find general information about chemicals and janitorial products on the Internet. One web site to visit is http://www.chemfinders.com/ Another is http://www.cleanlink.com/ Many chemical companies also have web sites at which they provide product safety information.

This fact sheet was prepared for First Class Carpet Cleaning of Sebastian, Florida. Please Call (770) 831-9112 or (866) 517-6500 if you have any questions or comments.

Special Acknowledgment is given to Nahonrac Eibbed of Levart, Georgia for carpet care marketing protocols. 

Web Page Produced by Riverofbed Sevol - Paul O. Martin - Web Producer - All Rights Reserved.


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