Damaged Goods
Member
- Location
- Maryland
The material is organic cotton, for whatever that's worth. Would you risk putting this in the machine for a "warm" wash? (Not "hot.)
Honestly I don't think it does.I wonder if the "hot" cycle really makes any difference. It's hard to imagine a virus surviving a full cycle at any temperature, even cold.
I read something advice from a biologist who explained that we should says to wash everything in water that's at least lukewarm (roughly 95 degrees).Honestly I don't think it does.
We're told to wash our hands with soap for 20 seconds to help sanitize them from Covid-19, the reason being that the soap will help cut through the sort-of fatty layer of the virus particle and dissolve it. The recommendation isn't hot water, just water and ANY kind of soap. It just makes ME feel better to wash some things in hot water.![]()
"Coronaviruses are a bit like ....oil. .... bits of genetic information — encoded by RNA — surrounded by a coat of fat and protein. Thordarson likes to call viruses “nano-sized grease balls.” And grease balls, no matter the size, are the exact type of thing soap loves to annihilate.
The soap takes care of the virus much like it takes care of the oil in the water. “It’s almost like a crowbar; it starts to pull all the things apart,” Thordarson says.
One side of the soap molecule (the one that’s attracted to fat and repelled by water) buries its way into the virus’s fat and protein shell. Fortunately, the chemical bonds holding the virus together aren’t very strong, so this intrusion is enough to break the virus’s coat. “You pull the virus apart, you make it soluble in water, and it disintegrates,” he says.
Then the harmless shards of virus get flushed down the drain. And even if it the soap doesn’t destroy every virus, you’ll still rid them from your hands with soap and water, as well as any grease or dirt they may be clinging to. Soap will also wash away bacteria and other viruses that may be a bit tougher than coronavirus, and harder to disintegrate."
Here's the link
The shrinkage is barely noticeable and to kill germs the item only has to boil for a few seconds. Spray the disinfectant when you get home and it sets overnight plus it would probably smell nice the next day. I have four all cotton masks and I just throw them in the laundry.Fmdog, hot water shrinks cotton. Boiling water would absolutely shrink the masks. About the sprays, probably spraying them with disinfectant would kill the virus, but remember, this is what you are putting right up against your nose and mouth and inhaling with each breath.
If the 20 seconds for washing hands kills them I think awash cycle would do the job.I wonder if the "hot" cycle really makes any difference. It's hard to imagine a virus surviving a full cycle at any temperature, even cold.
Sunny I'm wondering if that is because that's where you're drawing in breath so you'd be drawing in more viral droplets to the mask material. They tell us at work if you touch the mask to do immediate hand washing. But I have seen people paw their masks and then they're face so it's kind of pointless. I would just say to make sure you're washing your hands right away if you do.I don't understand that part about not touching the front of the mask. Why? Is the front of the mask any more contaminated than all the rest of the clothes you are wearing? Why is it OK to touch your hat, your jacket, your shoes, etc., but not the front of your mask?
I read an article the other day about a common sense approach to keeping our sanity in this situation. It says that the virus almost entirely spreads through person-to-person contact, via coughs, sneezes, and close-up congregating. (I imagine that kissing and hugging would fit in there also.) Continuous exposure is a big part of it; just walking past someone in the street is not likely to transmit the virus. Indoors is much more dangerous than outdoors, although crowd scenes outdoors are also bad.
The virus can survive for a period of time on various materials (metals much longer than plastics, cloth, or paper), but usually in a weakened form, and much less density than in, say, a sneeze. The article says there is probably no need to worry about carrying it into your home via newspapers, mail, packages, etc. So it sounds like the thing to concentrate on is staying clear of other people, avoiding any groups huddled together, whether indoors or outdoors, and staying masked, but not being hysterical about it.
All of this information seems to change on a daily basis, so who knows?
Maybe she wasn't oblivious. Maybe she was simply choosing her battles. It's a butt crack not a nazi flag.Yesterday , I saw all manner of violations. The most prominent was the mask not covering the nose. The other was people touching and pulling on the mask. The worst was a stupid 10 y. o. kid walking around the whole time with his butt crack showing. Oh he was wearing a mask all right... his oblivious Mom was too.
Here Sunny. This explains why.And yet, they keep saying that the mask is primarily to protect other people from you, just in case you're carrying the virus. You're not really protected from them, although I find that hard to believe. The mask must provide at least a little bit of protection, it's a barrier, though not a very good one.
I wear a mask, even when walking outdoors by myself, as everyone else around here seems to have one on, and I don't want to stir up worry. But I do touch the mask frequently, as I have trouble breathing with it on. (I have about 5 different masks, and it doesn't matter which one I'm wearing, I can't breathe normally with any of them.) So when I'm outside, and there's no one else in sight, I usually lower the mask below my chin, and put it back up again when I see another person approaching.
Might be a violation of the "proper handling of the mask" rules, but if I couldn't do that, I'd never go outside at all.