Ig Nobel Prize: UVC light sterilizes shoes, kills odor(bbc.com)
bbc.com
Ig Nobel Prize: UVC light sterilizes shoes, kills odor
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpq51xp4e91o
17 comments
I won't believe it until you try it on my belay partner's climbing shoes.
Their shoes should be banned under the Geneva convention.
Their shoes should be banned under the Geneva convention.
I use bleach infused cleaning wipes and I stuff few of them inside each shoe for few nights. I take them out whenever I put on the shoes. On a negative note, it caused some cheaper insoles to literally fall apart overnight while doing this.
Just curious, do you know the active ingredients on the wipes?
... I wear socks. There's a lot of things holding back my climbing, proper diet, weight training, sticking to a plan, etc... socks are not holding me back pahaha.
... I wear socks. There's a lot of things holding back my climbing, proper diet, weight training, sticking to a plan, etc... socks are not holding me back pahaha.
The ingredients are:
Anionic active ingredients less than five percent, fragrance, hydrogen peroxide, sodium bicarbonate, acetic acid, preservative - methylchloroisothiazolinone.
I don't see at a glance how it's bleach infused as the packaging claims.
I don't see at a glance how it's bleach infused as the packaging claims.
Have you tried spraying them inside and out with 70% isopropyl alcohol?
Vacuum also reduces odor: https://x.com/ID_AA_Carmack/status/1801263439769182405
I've been using the bleach trick, especially when my shoes get wet on their own.
Add a bit of bleach to a bucket, put the shoes there for 3-4 minutes, and then add a bit of thiosulfate to neutralize the bleach. Rinse under running water, and then dry in a tumble dryer (on a drying pan).
Add a bit of bleach to a bucket, put the shoes there for 3-4 minutes, and then add a bit of thiosulfate to neutralize the bleach. Rinse under running water, and then dry in a tumble dryer (on a drying pan).
I heard these were already common in China:
https://xcancel.com/NukitToBeSure/status/1972467734656209164...
https://xcancel.com/NukitToBeSure/status/1972467734656209164...
Any time I have tried to use a UVC light on a product, it always comes out smelling worse. Like, burnt somehow.
Going by the article, you might try reducing the exposure time.
My particular device has a fixed 2 minute timer, but apparently a "burnt hair" smell is an inevitable side-effect of the process.
https://www.uvccleaningsystems.com/cm/dpl/downloads/articles...
https://www.uvccleaningsystems.com/cm/dpl/downloads/articles...
Recently heard that about a study saying UV light can disable airbone allergens in a short time. And now this make it seem there's going to be a big demand for UV lights
Would definitely want to know what volatiles are being produced by this process.