On the camera its much easier to see, i was able to see the chocolate stain on all of them with exception of the stain resistant one. Would like to see this on motor oil, grease, grass clippings, rust, charcoal and mayonnaise. Thanks for another great video!
Definitely couldn’t agree more with the second choice of stains since I work in the landscaping industry wife is constantly yelling at me for my clothes
I think an interesting addition to the next round would be some automotive grade stain removers. I use Tuff Stuff all the time on carpets and it's pulled some serious stains out. Never tried it on clothes tho.
the ONE thing I miss from the USA, Tuff Stuff. That stuff was awesome. I had an 89 Astro Van back in like 2001-2005 or around there. I had chocolate milk spilled in the middle row carpet, it was there for at least a year or more, it smelled VERY bad. nothing would help. I bought Tuff Stuff and that took it right away. Man i wish I could have some of that again here.
You can definitely see the stains more clearly on camera. I'll also wash/Rinse any stained clothing first, so the stain removers/detergents can act more directly on the stain and not have to "work" through the buildup.
The mustard “stain” isn’t a stain. Mustard has quite a bit of distilled vinegar in it, which is an acid. The fibers are discolored, not stained. You would have to hit it with an oxidizing agent (borax, hydrogen peroxide, chlorinated bleach, etc.) to cover the acid discoloration.
@@chedsd2clips465 Regular 'stains' just stain the fibers, which can be removed easily, whereas mustard discolors the fibers completely. Think of it like tossing Ketchup at a wall and removing it vs throwing a layer of paint at the wall
You know, in these cleaning videos, there is another option you haven't tried: steam cleaning. I recently got a steam cleaner that I use for cleaning my air fryer for like $60 but the one I really wanted was a couple hundred but that one did NOT have the steam pipe going directly under the handle and as such, not right through your hand so no worry of getting hot handle after long use.
@@purrfectsld2122 Maybe try one of those steam cleaners like I said? Otherwise, I would say check with a local pet shop. They might have something in stock that would be perfect.
I've never used stain remover, I've always found detergent alone removes the majority of stains without issue. I don't like mustard so don't need to worry about that stain.
But what if you find yourself in the middle of a food fight and they are flinging hotdogs? Always stay one step ahead with some stain remover knowledge.
You should test the Magic Cut knife. I don’t think you have before but it explicitly states you can grind it on a cinder block and it won’t lose its edge. Thought of you as soon as I saw it haha!
Great Video! I would like to see you test these on car grease (The ugly stuff scraped from an engine block and from tie rod ends) , Texclad 3 (33% graphite) grease, 90 wt gear grease, oil base paint, latex base paint (Both paints need to be dry before testing), red clay (earth clay, not kiddy clay), and cooking grease.
Purple power, dawn and straight detergent concoction woth get that car grease out. Cooking grease use platinum dawn. Probably work on the others too. My ex was a mechanic and roofer. The concoction above got roof tar out of his clothes and 6 day caked on car grease from doing everything from tranny swaps to oil changes. His hands stayed black but hos. Clothes were sparkling clean from me washing them.
Remember the snake oil that is stain removers are just a detergent.. rub some washing up liquid on them instead ( dish soap) and that will work just as good. As for the shirt it will be Teflon coated but it washes off eventually and they are great school uniform shirts for kids.
I don’t think it is Teflon coated, as Teflon isn’t known for flexibility. Also, Teflon isn’t exactly hydrophobic. It is more accurately water impervious. The way the liquids acted it was a hydrophobic coating. Likely along the lines of static attached polyester or silicon.
My wife and I just rub the stain with some of our regular detergent prior to running the regular wash cycle. We let it sit for 10-15 mins before actually washing. It has always worked better than the stain removing products for us. This may be the same effect as the presoak but I can testify to it working great! Keep up the entertaining videos!
You should do a video for all the mechanics out there and test the myths of removing oil/grease stains! Would be a very helpful video! I’ve heard of simple green, dawn dish soap, and diesel then soap just to give a few!
You need to add grass stains to the list I would consider it a common stain (kids who like to play outside) also would like to see possibly motor oil for all the mechanics out there. And maybe tattoo ink got to make these stains tougher if they came out just doing a pre soak
Used to work as a mechanic and old boss talked to me about when they had white uniforms back in the day they guys would just spray brake clean through the shirts to clean them so i think that would be a cool comparison considering your past as a diesel mechanic.
You're right, but the fact that even if you're a dumbass that lets a stain soak in, you can just wash it and get the stain out with ease is also impressive on its own.
That's not what was advertised. It was advertised to simply not absorb it in the first place. "Sliding right off" so to speak. Though I do agree that letting it sit for a day was probably a bit much, and there's not a lot of fabrics that would deal with that. Especially not against really acidic stains.
@@point-five-oh6249 there’s nothing in the phrase “stain resistant” that implies it doesn’t absorb at all. If anything it implies exactly what happened here: it won’t stain immediately but if you leave it, it might.
Seems like stain remover is like a more localized presoak so if you have something that doesn't hold up well to multiple washings then maybe the stain remover would be useful
Hmm that must be a coincidence because I don’t think the color alone can have much of an effect on the difficulty to remove..right? If you think about it there’s not really many yellow liquids in existence to stain clothes. Pretty much just mustard and of course urine so could easily be coincidence that those are both hard to remove substances
I was a Mechanic for many years and the best thing I found was use liquid Tide, rub it in the stain, let it sit for 20 mins, wash it and it always got my stains out. Great video as always.
Just thumbin' through RUclips, mindin' my own business, and WHAM!! There it was...Some hairy little kid in his Mom's garage trynna' wreck stuff. Started watchin' it and it was just hilarious! Thanks alot, little dude.
The only purpose for stain removers is that they often double for spot treatments like on carpets or upholstery where normal detergent would be impossible to rise out well
From what i have learned with stain remover, laundry soap, and dishwasher soaps. It all depends on your water supply. For instance where I live Cascade works better than jet dry
"Everything else is gone but the mustard!" Except massive stains from the red wine and chocolate in some cases. I guess our definitions of "gone" are different.
I have iced tea and when the gunshot noise goes off randomly and u look and the camera with no words I just immediately spewed tea all over my keyboard.
I would be interested to see how all these perform on new stains that haven’t sat for a day. Stains in your house that you can attend to immediately are pretty common. I can imagine it would make a difference in at least some cases
Thats. What he just did and a rinse with cold water does the trick on fresh stains right after the accident. If it's blood use peroxide rinse and repeat with cold water. Hot sets the stain in. To me a stain is something thats been there for days even weeks and has been set in with the dryer. Otherwise rinse it right away.
Lestoil - 1 tbsp in 1 cup water Add a bit to Tide powder to turn into paste. Add washing soda and sodium percarbonate and STPP (sodium tripolyphosphate) and some rubbing alcohol. Brush onto stain, let sit overnight. Throw in wash.
Charlie's soap. Run a soak, then a wash. Then lay the clothes or whatever outside while still wet (after the wash) and let the sun take the stains out. Works GREAT!
That could be dangerous. It could make a toxic cloud. I know some cleaning chemicals make mustard gas if mixed accidently. I can't remember the exact ones though.
@@kingpeepsexoticcreatureoub8762 that's bleach and ammonia. Which you aren't likely to find in stain removers. Although never a good idea to mix household cleaners as there could be reactions. I doubt stain removers would cause any reactions because they mostly have surfactants and enzymes.
Tyler we use Era detergent on stains, and wash stuff with a regular load laundry detergent. When my son was about 18 months old he managed to get an entire bottle of red food coloring all over a new suit. I soaked the suit in Era and washed it the next day and there was no sign of the red dye ever being there. It's never failed us yet.
Loud bang. Everyone in the neighbourhood "What's Tyler up to now?" Tyler in his garage playing with T-shirts and condiments "wh..what was that?" If Tyler is worried then everyone should be worried
Something I picked up in college for my art classes was a little stick of stain remover called "Kiss Off". It'll get out even oil paint. Never had it fail if you follow the directions.
you should do a comparison test of mosquito repellant devices as we head into the summer months. I definitely have fallen victim to some pretty crappy devices
The stain sprays are essential supposed to be used like pre soak. You spray them on the stain and throw them in the hamper. Them clean them later. They work much better that way
Just a note: in the name Merlot the t is silent, because it's a french winegrape species. It's pretty common across Europe. It gained popularity, because you can make very fine wines out of it, but also you can make cheap mass produced ones
“The Amazon listing showed ketchup running off…” *Proceeds to rub ketchup into the shirt* I’d say this is a close second to continuing to throw ninja stars at a shield while they violently bounce back, input lads?
Mustard is so hard to remove because mustard doesnt stain in the traditional sense. It has everything in it necessary to be classified as a permanent dye. Including a _very_ potent chemical known for vibrant colors.
I want to make note that this us coming from experience. Between working at a scrap yard getting all greasy and grimy to working at restaurants getting food splatters and so on . Between simple green and dawn dish soap and got water it gets pretty much anything out of your clothes. And best thing is about simple green is it's a concentrate so if you water it down as instructed on label the cost is far cheaper than these other stain removers. A bottle of simple green is about $5-$7 depending where you get it and will make several spray bottles , in compared to a single spray bottle of stain removal for about the same cost . Also it is environment friendly as well , if you mix the simple green in spray bottle with about 3 tablespoons of dawn dish soap and rest with water you are golden
I would love to see this same exact video but with colored materials involved. I have used my stain removers for awhile and they work great for quick spot treatment but I've also been burned by them, particularly with khaki or similar light/pastel color. This video is great but i would love to see you go deeper!
Somehow it feels like the idea with the stain resistant shirt is that it helps it come off almost immediately after it happens like how the coolaid beaded up immediately after touching the surface of it
2 things. 1 the test showed how these products work with food stains. There should be a test for the different types off stains. Those are ink, dirt, oil, food and blood. 2 Did all of these shirts get all washed in the same load?? If so then it would make sense that they would all have the same result. Love the videos!!! Can't wait for the next one!!!
i work in fast food and i can tell you for a fact mustard stains EVERYTHING. even our tables get stained from mustard being on there for a few mins and then being wiped up and sprayed then scrubbed with sanitizer and cleaner.
I work at a dry cleaners and mustard is one of the hardest stains to get out. Even with all the chemicals we have, it won't budge. Ink, rust, and blood are the other stains that are very hard to get out. This was a good comparison.
Because mustard does stain in the traditional sense. It has everything in it necessary to be classified as a dye. Including a _very_ potent chemical known for vibrant colors.
Pre treat with plain old Dawn diswashing detergent. Dampen the fabric then a few drops of Dawn and work for a few seconds with the tips of your fingers. For really stubborn stains you can use an old toothbrush, though I haven't noticed it makes much difference in results. Wad up the item so it will stay damp, let sit for a couple of hours, then wash. I've found it works better than the purpose-made stuff, especially on greasy stains. Only thing I've found that will reliably get shirt collars clean, even old stains that have been dried in.
@@653j521 I tried that. It didn't seem to work as well so I switched back to regular old Dawn. I'm not going to fret over the buck a bottle difference.
Like a few people I’d like to see grease, oil, rust, that type of thing, but I’d also like to see everything presoaked, and then the stain remover. Also could see the stains better in camera
Tyler should test out the product that supposedly water proofs things like food and clothes and he should test out how effective it is. Also I think it’s worth mentioning that the stain resistant shirt might have not had any stains if you actually wore it I think everything would have just slipped off and wouldn’t have stained if you didn’t wipe it into the fabric but either way great vids Tyler, been watching this channel very close to the very start of it🤘
On the camera its much easier to see, i was able to see the chocolate stain on all of them with exception of the stain resistant one. Would like to see this on motor oil, grease, grass clippings, rust, charcoal and mayonnaise. Thanks for another great video!
I second this selection of stains
Same
Definitely couldn’t agree more with the second choice of stains since I work in the landscaping industry wife is constantly yelling at me for my clothes
this sounds like you experience these on a daily
@@jakerobeck669 Funny enough no, im a network analyst , but i spend alot of time outdoors and in my garage.
I really appreciate how you test things we do so often. The things I learn from your videos, always clears up the best choices in things I should buy.
I would like to see another round of this done on more relatively common stains such as grass, blood, oil, rust, marker/pen, and deodorant.
Yes, PLEASE!
Ah, I too happen to commonly encounter situations where large volumes of blood are splattered over my articles of clothing.
@@beanos2287 I am a taxidermist, so blood does often get on my clothes 😅
@@vincetravis8701 fair enough
Lol
I think an interesting addition to the next round would be some automotive grade stain removers.
I use Tuff Stuff all the time on carpets and it's pulled some serious stains out.
Never tried it on clothes tho.
the ONE thing I miss from the USA, Tuff Stuff. That stuff was awesome. I had an 89 Astro Van back in like 2001-2005 or around there. I had chocolate milk spilled in the middle row carpet, it was there for at least a year or more, it smelled VERY bad. nothing would help. I bought Tuff Stuff and that took it right away. Man i wish I could have some of that again here.
Purple power is one of my favorites. It's pretty dang good on grease and what not.
RIP one bug, one large bug.
The torch method is one of the best in my opinion. Quick kill and can get annoying flies out of the air!
Also works well as a stain remover!🤪
I love how he just did it and then didn’t address what just happened lol 😂
the biblical way of cleaning
My guess was a spider egg. That’s just my torch use tho lol
You can definitely see the stains more clearly on camera. I'll also wash/Rinse any stained clothing first, so the stain removers/detergents can act more directly on the stain and not have to "work" through the buildup.
The mustard “stain” isn’t a stain. Mustard has quite a bit of distilled vinegar in it, which is an acid. The fibers are discolored, not stained. You would have to hit it with an oxidizing agent (borax, hydrogen peroxide, chlorinated bleach, etc.) to cover the acid discoloration.
What is the oxi in oxi clean mean?
Lets not forget that mustard contains turmeric, a very potent dye.
Isn't... isn't that what a stain is? couldn't you say all stains are just discoloration
@@chedsd2clips465 Regular 'stains' just stain the fibers, which can be removed easily, whereas mustard discolors the fibers completely. Think of it like tossing Ketchup at a wall and removing it vs throwing a layer of paint at the wall
You know, in these cleaning videos, there is another option you haven't tried: steam cleaning. I recently got a steam cleaner that I use for cleaning my air fryer for like $60 but the one I really wanted was a couple hundred but that one did NOT have the steam pipe going directly under the handle and as such, not right through your hand so no worry of getting hot handle after long use.
By any chance do you know what should I use to clean cat urine stain? My lil one peed on the matress
@@purrfectsld2122 Maybe try one of those steam cleaners like I said? Otherwise, I would say check with a local pet shop. They might have something in stock that would be perfect.
@@purrfectsld2122enzyme cleaners.
I've never used stain remover, I've always found detergent alone removes the majority of stains without issue. I don't like mustard so don't need to worry about that stain.
But what if you find yourself in the middle of a food fight and they are flinging hotdogs?
Always stay one step ahead with some stain remover knowledge.
@@genodedemon5109 I hadn't thought of that situation, when it happens I'll come back to this comment and update you
dawn (dishwasher soap), the thick version, works great sometimes ... has its moments
Especially if you get mustard on a duck. Works wonders.
I love how he deals with uninvited intruders. 😂
You should test the Magic Cut knife. I don’t think you have before but it explicitly states you can grind it on a cinder block and it won’t lose its edge. Thought of you as soon as I saw it haha!
I like how you could see the phases of Tyler's thinking after that mini explosion happened
I liked how he didn’t even tell us what it ended up being.
@@Chrissylovesyou20 I need to know!
@@Clay3613 not sure if hes in the country but it certainly sounded like a smaller caliber gunshot
"we have a red wine....a merLOT, whatever that means" hahahahahaha
Tyler killed me when he said Merlott instead of Merlot
This comment won't make sense to Tyler
You should explain it has a silent T
Mur-low
What ever that means lol
coup de grass..lol
Great Video! I would like to see you test these on car grease (The ugly stuff scraped from an engine block and from tie rod ends) , Texclad 3 (33% graphite) grease, 90 wt gear grease, oil base paint, latex base paint (Both paints need to be dry before testing), red clay (earth clay, not kiddy clay), and cooking grease.
This is really good, he need to see this, always use the same products for the stains, but never this heavy duty things
Wow you threw the kitchen sink of stains out there damnnn but agreeable
Purple power, dawn and straight detergent concoction woth get that car grease out. Cooking grease use platinum dawn.
Probably work on the others too.
My ex was a mechanic and roofer. The concoction above got roof tar out of his clothes and 6 day caked on car grease from doing everything from tranny swaps to oil changes. His hands stayed black but hos. Clothes were sparkling clean from me washing them.
Remember the snake oil that is stain removers are just a detergent.. rub some washing up liquid on them instead ( dish soap) and that will work just as good. As for the shirt it will be Teflon coated but it washes off eventually and they are great school uniform shirts for kids.
I don’t think it is Teflon coated, as Teflon isn’t known for flexibility. Also, Teflon isn’t exactly hydrophobic. It is more accurately water impervious. The way the liquids acted it was a hydrophobic coating. Likely along the lines of static attached polyester or silicon.
@@akakscase labels on the ones we buy reads 65% polyester, 35% viscose.Teflon coated fabric that repels water and stains.
My wife and I just rub the stain with some of our regular detergent prior to running the regular wash cycle. We let it sit for 10-15 mins before actually washing. It has always worked better than the stain removing products for us. This may be the same effect as the presoak but I can testify to it working great! Keep up the entertaining videos!
Try fels naptha stain remover bar in the detergent area…it will looks like a bar of soap….works great
Max pro is the best
You should do a video for all the mechanics out there and test the myths of removing oil/grease stains! Would be a very helpful video! I’ve heard of simple green, dawn dish soap, and diesel then soap just to give a few!
I’d like to see how they do against oil/grease stains
Grandma’s Secret sounds like a geriatric lingerie company 😂 which is honestly a horrific thought!
You need to add grass stains to the list I would consider it a common stain (kids who like to play outside) also would like to see possibly motor oil for all the mechanics out there. And maybe tattoo ink got to make these stains tougher if they came out just doing a pre soak
You getting the bug with the blowtorch and saying nothing made me laugh so much 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Used to work as a mechanic and old boss talked to me about when they had white uniforms back in the day they guys would just spray brake clean through the shirts to clean them so i think that would be a cool comparison considering your past as a diesel mechanic.
There are times where I've parked my ass on the couch and just watched this channel. I love it.
You should soak a bunch of stuff in Bleach or Chlorine for 24 hours in your next video. Awesome vid man keep it up! I love your content!!!
Lmao that moment where you lit the bug on fire
With the stain protected shirt you're supposed to wipe stuff off, preventing it from soaking in.
Yeah but that’s not obvious
@@amusedapple4933 the mole on ur forehead isn't obvious
You're right, but the fact that even if you're a dumbass that lets a stain soak in, you can just wash it and get the stain out with ease is also impressive on its own.
That's not what was advertised. It was advertised to simply not absorb it in the first place. "Sliding right off" so to speak. Though I do agree that letting it sit for a day was probably a bit much, and there's not a lot of fabrics that would deal with that. Especially not against really acidic stains.
@@point-five-oh6249 there’s nothing in the phrase “stain resistant” that implies it doesn’t absorb at all. If anything it implies exactly what happened here: it won’t stain immediately but if you leave it, it might.
The hardest stain to get out is baseball infield dirt that is really in the fabric.Would love to see the stain removers against that.
A bar Fels Naptha
Seems like stain remover is like a more localized presoak so if you have something that doesn't hold up well to multiple washings then maybe the stain remover would be useful
I love that you obliterated the bug out of existence
I work at a drycleaners. Yellow stains are basically impossible to remove. I’ve rarely ever seen one come out of something white especially
Hmm that must be a coincidence because I don’t think the color alone can have much of an effect on the difficulty to remove..right? If you think about it there’s not really many yellow liquids in existence to stain clothes. Pretty much just mustard and of course urine so could easily be coincidence that those are both hard to remove substances
I was a Mechanic for many years and the best thing I found was use liquid Tide, rub it in the stain, let it sit for 20 mins, wash it and it always got my stains out. Great video as always.
tranny fluid has killed sooooooo many shirts for me.
@@truckguy6666 Dried fluid from fun times? ;)
You should see how many washes it takes to get the stains out with the same stain removers plus dawn dish soap.
Dawn is a good one and i. An vouch that it works.
What that sounded like was thunder. I can't say for sure that's what it was though.
Merlot is pronounced mer-low by the way.
Nope, it's mer lot now
I dont think that was thunder. It would have been louder and sound more bazaar then that.
Just thumbin' through RUclips, mindin' my own business, and WHAM!! There it was...Some hairy little kid in his Mom's garage trynna' wreck stuff.
Started watchin' it and it was just hilarious!
Thanks alot, little dude.
“ what was that “ we want to know too
The BEST stain remover is Dawn Dish Soap. Apply to stain and use a brush to agitate then wash. Try that!!
Best window clean too, diluted heavily.
The juice from some crunchy delicious pickles can leave a slight stain if you just can't wait for them to stop dropping before chowing down
Love how he says red wine “merlot” lol
The only purpose for stain removers is that they often double for spot treatments like on carpets or upholstery where normal detergent would be impossible to rise out well
From what i have learned with stain remover, laundry soap, and dishwasher soaps. It all depends on your water supply. For instance where I live Cascade works better than jet dry
Those Factor meals are actually really tasty, saves me a ton of time. Thanks for the discount dude
If there's anything I've learned from these videos... wine being one of the toughest stains to remove makes mustard laugh XD
"Everything else is gone but the mustard!" Except massive stains from the red wine and chocolate in some cases. I guess our definitions of "gone" are different.
I have iced tea and when the gunshot noise goes off randomly and u look and the camera with no words I just immediately spewed tea all over my keyboard.
I would be interested to see how all these perform on new stains that haven’t sat for a day. Stains in your house that you can attend to immediately are pretty common. I can imagine it would make a difference in at least some cases
Thats. What he just did and a rinse with cold water does the trick on fresh stains right after the accident. If it's blood use peroxide rinse and repeat with cold water. Hot sets the stain in.
To me a stain is something thats been there for days even weeks and has been set in with the dryer. Otherwise rinse it right away.
Lestoil - 1 tbsp in 1 cup water
Add a bit to Tide powder to turn into paste. Add washing soda and sodium percarbonate and STPP (sodium tripolyphosphate) and some rubbing alcohol.
Brush onto stain, let sit overnight. Throw in wash.
Charlie's soap. Run a soak, then a wash. Then lay the clothes or whatever outside while still wet (after the wash) and let the sun take the stains out. Works GREAT!
The camera does actually show more stain remnants that Tyler can't see with a naked eye.But all in all a fair test.
What happens if you mixed all of the stain removers?
the stain infinity stones
Wipe out half of all stains in the universe
That could be dangerous. It could make a toxic cloud. I know some cleaning chemicals make mustard gas if mixed accidently. I can't remember the exact ones though.
@@kingpeepsexoticcreatureoub8762 that's bleach and ammonia. Which you aren't likely to find in stain removers. Although never a good idea to mix household cleaners as there could be reactions. I doubt stain removers would cause any reactions because they mostly have surfactants and enzymes.
Now i'm curious....nice idea for next video??
stain removers exists*
Mustard: "so you've chosen death?"
Tyler we use Era detergent on stains, and wash stuff with a regular load laundry detergent. When my son was about 18 months old he managed to get an entire bottle of red food coloring all over a new suit. I soaked the suit in Era and washed it the next day and there was no sign of the red dye ever being there. It's never failed us yet.
Gotta try them with grass mud and all the other outside related stains
Impressive on the natural one! Super unexpected!
The way it just cut to him lighting up a bug 😂
So Kool Aid tastes like 1997 if they come in those strange plastic bottles. You're so right!
Loud bang.
Everyone in the neighbourhood "What's Tyler up to now?"
Tyler in his garage playing with T-shirts and condiments "wh..what was that?"
If Tyler is worried then everyone should be worried
Yep. Still want to know what it was.
Sounds like a thunder crash.
Something I picked up in college for my art classes was a little stick of stain remover called "Kiss Off". It'll get out even oil paint. Never had it fail if you follow the directions.
you should do a comparison test of mosquito repellant devices as we head into the summer months. I definitely have fallen victim to some pretty crappy devices
The stain sprays are essential supposed to be used like pre soak. You spray them on the stain and throw them in the hamper. Them clean them later. They work much better that way
I’d love to see household products used as stain remover to see if they work! For example, hand soap, bar soap, shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash etc 😀
*stands there for 3 seconds* “… what was that” lol
Just a note: in the name Merlot the t is silent, because it's a french winegrape species. It's pretty common across Europe. It gained popularity, because you can make very fine wines out of it, but also you can make cheap mass produced ones
“The Amazon listing showed ketchup running off…”
*Proceeds to rub ketchup into the shirt*
I’d say this is a close second to continuing to throw ninja stars at a shield while they violently bounce back, input lads?
This channel is the only reason I am keeping my yt premium.
So tyler is out there walking around with a constant mustard stain now
Mustard is so hard to remove because mustard doesnt stain in the traditional sense.
It has everything in it necessary to be classified as a permanent dye. Including a _very_ potent chemical known for vibrant colors.
Try simple green for stains it works amazing. Spray it give it a scrub with a brush and let it set for a few min and wash in hot water
I want to make note that this us coming from experience. Between working at a scrap yard getting all greasy and grimy to working at restaurants getting food splatters and so on . Between simple green and dawn dish soap and got water it gets pretty much anything out of your clothes. And best thing is about simple green is it's a concentrate so if you water it down as instructed on label the cost is far cheaper than these other stain removers. A bottle of simple green is about $5-$7 depending where you get it and will make several spray bottles , in compared to a single spray bottle of stain removal for about the same cost . Also it is environment friendly as well , if you mix the simple green in spray bottle with about 3 tablespoons of dawn dish soap and rest with water you are golden
@@yogi_minnis Mustard? Who has managed to get out dried mustard?
You've gotta do a video on spray adhesives.
You're like the king of the glue videos on YT.
I think I speak for everyone Tyler, we need atleast 30min videos from now on ok.😄👍🏼👍🏼
The spaghetti still being on the wall is peak tylertube
The only thing I use stain remover on anymore is carpet, because pre-soaking with detergent isn't practical on carpet; the suds just keep on comin'.
I would love to see this same exact video but with colored materials involved. I have used my stain removers for awhile and they work great for quick spot treatment but I've also been burned by them, particularly with khaki or similar light/pastel color. This video is great but i would love to see you go deeper!
Tyler is the best. Period.
Somehow it feels like the idea with the stain resistant shirt is that it helps it come off almost immediately after it happens like how the coolaid beaded up immediately after touching the surface of it
Am I the only one who died laughing when he blowtorched the bug lol I'm assuming it was a bug lol
Yellow mustard is made with turmeric and turmeric is a natural dye, so basically it won't come out without using bleach.
Another TylerTube banger! Lets go
2 things.
1 the test showed how these products work with food stains. There should be a test for the different types off stains. Those are ink, dirt, oil, food and blood.
2 Did all of these shirts get all washed in the same load?? If so then it would make sense that they would all have the same result.
Love the videos!!! Can't wait for the next one!!!
White tees with conspicuous mustard stains on the right side middle would be good merch.
Is the stain resistant shirt flame resistant too? Or does it burn faster?
So apart from the explosion in the back ground. Is no one talking about how Tyler has four right hands?
Or the torching of whatever bug that was lol 🤣
Where
Tyler: “and last but not least grandmas stain remover”
Also Tyler: “and last but not least gain”
me uses bug spray ... TylerTube , bug spray whats that i have a blow torch haha, i am dead hahaha
i work in fast food and i can tell you for a fact mustard stains EVERYTHING. even our tables get stained from mustard being on there for a few mins and then being wiped up and sprayed then scrubbed with sanitizer and cleaner.
I work at a dry cleaners and mustard is one of the hardest stains to get out. Even with all the chemicals we have, it won't budge. Ink, rust, and blood are the other stains that are very hard to get out. This was a good comparison.
Because mustard does stain in the traditional sense.
It has everything in it necessary to be classified as a dye. Including a _very_ potent chemical known for vibrant colors.
I love the Toast vs Raw Toast concept.
11:28 It's the same method that I use to kill spiders in my house hahaha!!
My favorite RUclipsr now
Pre treat with plain old Dawn diswashing detergent. Dampen the fabric then a few drops of Dawn and work for a few seconds with the tips of your fingers. For really stubborn stains you can use an old toothbrush, though I haven't noticed it makes much difference in results. Wad up the item so it will stay damp, let sit for a couple of hours, then wash. I've found it works better than the purpose-made stuff, especially on greasy stains. Only thing I've found that will reliably get shirt collars clean, even old stains that have been dried in.
Or Walmart's version of it that costs a lot less.
@@653j521 I tried that. It didn't seem to work as well so I switched back to regular old Dawn. I'm not going to fret over the buck a bottle difference.
Tyler out here uncovering secrets that’s gonna get him whacked. If he ever disappears we will know why,the laundry detergent mafia gottem
Did you ever go back to the lawn mower for the extended test,?
Thanks for the great videos.
You should try staining them with garage items such as engine oil or atf
Mustard is just too gangster 🤣
The gimmicks they sell us. Thank you Tyler!!
The last time i was this early, Tyler's beard was not there!
Time to watch, bet it's great as per usual.
Tyler lives on the other side of the tracks :)
Would love to see them washed in different detergents I.e. gain,all,tide ect and you should also try bacon grease. Red meat juice
Like a few people I’d like to see grease, oil, rust, that type of thing, but I’d also like to see everything presoaked, and then the stain remover. Also could see the stains better in camera
Tyler should test out the product that supposedly water proofs things like food and clothes and he should test out how effective it is. Also I think it’s worth mentioning that the stain resistant shirt might have not had any stains if you actually wore it I think everything would have just slipped off and wouldn’t have stained if you didn’t wipe it into the fabric but either way great vids Tyler, been watching this channel very close to the very start of it🤘
Especially with shoes