After lugging around the mop and bucket this morning, I thought 'why don't I get a steam mop'. Do any of you have them and, if so, are they any good? We have tiled floors everywhere, no carpets, just a few rugs.
It's a great pity the right of free speech isn't based on the obligation to say something sensible.
Post by Berry McPaper-cuts on Aug 12, 2022 7:47:31 GMT
I have a steam mop which is great on the conservatory tiles. When we had the en suite and bathroom revamped the plumber told me under no account to use a steam mop as it would leave the tiles up. So it depends on your tiles!
I have one, I use it on the bathroom tiles (floors & walls), shower screen & the kitchen and hall laminate flooring, it leaves them spotless and hygenic without having to use detergents, I also use it to freshen up and lift the pile on the carpets and clean the upholstery and mattresses. Mine converts to a handheld and you can clean and disenfect just about anything using the various tools and attachments like toilet bowls & sinks, windows, cooker hobs etc, I wouldn't be without mine!
People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right, the only difference is they're wrong
Thanks DD. I have an 'ordinary'cylinder-type steamer which I love and use for the bathrooms and kitchen but it doeesn't have a floor attachment.I have had it for years and it's great.
It's a great pity the right of free speech isn't based on the obligation to say something sensible.
Do they lift any minor stains in carpets at all DD?
It doesn't clean them like a carpet cleaner would but I've used it when the cats have been sick and despite cleaning the area with shampoo and a cloth there's still a residue, it's got rid of that and it generally sterilises them and lifts the pile
People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right, the only difference is they're wrong