Teapot De-coke
- Muddypause
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Teapot De-coke
I made the mistake of peering into my well used teapot the other day. After 15 or more years use, it has a thick, chunky layer of residue build-up inside it, the colour of strong tea. Very very strong tea. It's clogging the spout holes, and occasionally bits of it come adrift to give me 'tea with extras'.
I left it soaking overnight filled with vinegar, but this did nothing to shift the crud, and made my morning cuppa taste rather, um, challenging.
Anybody know what I might be able to use to shift this stuff?
I left it soaking overnight filled with vinegar, but this did nothing to shift the crud, and made my morning cuppa taste rather, um, challenging.
Anybody know what I might be able to use to shift this stuff?
Stew
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Shirley
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rub salt onto it...
Actually, I misread your post at first... I didn't see the R in the word... peering!!

Actually, I misread your post at first... I didn't see the R in the word... peering!!
Shirley
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Shirlz2005 wrote:rub salt onto it...
Actually, I misread your post at first... I didn't see the R in the word... peering!!![]()
Mate!
I think the deposit is - among other things - tannic acid, so an alkaline cleaner is needed. If you want to go low tech try washing soda.
Nev
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Like Nev I think it's tannic acid but mostly an iron compound. I've been racking my brains trying to recall an article in a Chemistry journal about exactly the same thing.
Essentially as the tea cools, the iron compound is precipitated out (at boiling or near boiling point of water tannic chelates iron). A good blast/soaking in caustic soda'll help.
Essentially as the tea cools, the iron compound is precipitated out (at boiling or near boiling point of water tannic chelates iron). A good blast/soaking in caustic soda'll help.
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- Muddypause
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And the winner is...
Actually, what I did was to fill the teapot with a strong salt solution and leave it overnight. I didn't actually think this would achieve much (I thought, like Shirlz says, you had to rub the salt in, so that it acted like an abrasive - that's what those two on the telly keep going on about). But to my surprise, a good rinse out with fresh water this morning and many years of deposits simply rinsed out with it.
It now pours properly, is clean and shiney inside, and I don't get bits swirling around in me tea.
Job done.
Actually, what I did was to fill the teapot with a strong salt solution and leave it overnight. I didn't actually think this would achieve much (I thought, like Shirlz says, you had to rub the salt in, so that it acted like an abrasive - that's what those two on the telly keep going on about). But to my surprise, a good rinse out with fresh water this morning and many years of deposits simply rinsed out with it.
It now pours properly, is clean and shiney inside, and I don't get bits swirling around in me tea.
Job done.
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential