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Mineral stains in toilets and showers

Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:44 am
Posted by lsugrad35
Jambalaya capital of the world
Member since Feb 2007
3320 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:44 am
I have really hard water (I think is what you’d call it) and my toilets always have brown rings. In the guest bathroom when it’s not used often, everything under the water line is often brown. Anyone found anything good to help with this? Would be nice to prevent it but even if I could just clean it would be nice.

Also, porcelain tile in the shower. What’s your go to shower cleaner? I have a nice tile shower and I use a curtain and refuse to put a glass door on because it will be ruined so quickly.
Posted by tigNstick629
Member since Jan 2017
158 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:53 am to
Pumice scouring stick is what you need. A few minutes a couple of times a year and your toilets will look brand new.
Posted by indytiger
Krotz Springs
Member since Oct 2004
10222 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:53 am to
You have well water? We had this problem bad before getting an iron filter put on the downstream side of our well.

For cleaning: Whink Rust Remover
LINK

The one in the shaped bottle in the link. Make sure on the back it has Hydrofluoric acid as an ingredient (they have another product that uses oxalic acid and its not as good). I've found it at some of my local grocery stores and dollar generals. It works amazing on toilets and sinks that are stained with rust.
Posted by lsugrad35
Jambalaya capital of the world
Member since Feb 2007
3320 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:59 am to
City water. It seems to ruin everything.
Posted by ItzMe1972
Member since Dec 2013
12227 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 11:16 am to
I second this:

Posted by PillageUrVillage
Mordor
Member since Mar 2011
15777 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 11:20 am to
Muriatic Acid
Posted by Hackberries
Member since Aug 2023
23 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 1:16 pm to
I’ve had good luck with a brush attachment on drill + bar keepers friend
Posted by ellunchboxo
G-Town
Member since Feb 2009
19297 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 8:09 pm to
quote:

Pumice scouring stick


Amazon sells a kit with 10 or so stones that attach to a stick so you dont have to get your hands wet.

Easy peasy. Takes about 5 minutes
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
42469 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 10:14 pm to
quote:

Pumice scouring stick 


This , they work wonders
Posted by LemmyLives
Texas
Member since Mar 2019
13722 posts
Posted on 1/1/26 at 11:12 pm to
Get your water tested. In certain areas of Houston, there is a bacteria that feeds off of water minerals, which I've never seen, that causes a black non toxic growth on the ends of faucets, but especially under the rims of toilets. It just depends on your water source, and the composition of it, as to how you fix the root cause.

I say that, because cleaning that or the brown crap out of your toilets isn't going to save your dishwasher, fridge filter, washer, hot water heater, etc., if there's a mineral imbalance that can be fixed with a water softener/conditioner. The prices are easily under $2k if your water line isn't in a dumb place, and it is 1000% worth it.
Posted by DMAN1968
Member since Apr 2019
12632 posts
Posted on 1/2/26 at 2:46 am to
To clean it you can use drywall sand paper. It's something like a fine mesh coated to whatever "grit" you need. Water doesn't hurt it so it works fine for the toilet. The big box stores all have some.

Or the pumice stone like others have said.

The porcelain in the toilet is harder than anything you are going to try to clean it with so you won't scratch it.
Posted by Bayou
Boudin, LA
Member since Feb 2005
41742 posts
Posted on 1/2/26 at 6:45 am to
This is your answer. If you ever drive through Alexandria Long's Janitorial is the first building at the Broadway exit. Easy. There is also a special applicator to use for $2. Product is $16 in store or use Amazon at higher price. LINK
Posted by Tigers4Lyfe
Member since Nov 2010
6383 posts
Posted on 1/2/26 at 8:36 am to
This is all over Facebook. Just drop it in your tank and it's guaranteed to last 10 years.

I don't know if it will clean what's already there, but it's supposed to prevent it from happening when starting with a clean bowl.

Krazy Kleen
This post was edited on 1/2/26 at 11:49 am
Posted by idlewatcher
Planet Arium
Member since Jan 2012
92947 posts
Posted on 1/2/26 at 9:24 am to
quote:

Get your water tested. In certain areas of Houston, there is a bacteria that feeds off of water minerals, which I've never seen, that causes a black non toxic growth on the ends of faucets, but especially under the rims of toilets. It just depends on your water source, and the composition of it, as to how you fix the root cause.



You'd think all of that would die with how high the chlorine concentration is in our water
Posted by lsugrad35
Jambalaya capital of the world
Member since Feb 2007
3320 posts
Posted on 1/2/26 at 2:57 pm to
quote:

This is all over Facebook. Just drop it in your tank and it's guaranteed to last 10 years.


This is actually what brought me here. I saw this and thought it would be awesome if it worked, but I have my doubts. That's ideal to prevent it before it happens. I've used a stone a few times and it seems to work, but I was always concerned about roughing it up and causing any damage.
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