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View Full Version : The inside of my dishwasher is orange.


crazyjoe
07-10-2006, 12:10 PM
And I didn't order it like that.

I can only assume that someone either put a bowlful of pasta sauce or carrots in the damn thing and ran it. I have run a cycle with vinegar and a cycle with bleach, neither of which seems to have fixed the problem (both made it only slightly better).

Any suggestions?

(I know it's not rust in the water, because my toilet water was not orange, and I have a whole-house filtration system that's supposed to prevent that)

CookingWithGas
07-10-2006, 12:31 PM
Tomato sauce in sufficient quantity would do that, although would have to be more than what is normally left on dishes. Not so sure about carrots. However, it would also affect some kinds of dishes and cookware, especially plastic. Anything else orange?

It shouldn't cause any problems but if you don't like it I would clean it by hand with a sponge dipped in a solution of about 1 oz. bleach to 1 cup water, rather than just putting bleach in the wash cycle. (See the bleach bottle for the best proportion.) The inside of your dishwasher is probably white plastic, which is a bear to de-stain. You could also try Softscrub with Bleach although that would require more thorough rinsing.

"Someone"? You don't know who has access to your dishwasher? :confused:

crazyjoe
07-10-2006, 12:38 PM
Ah, my good fellow, you see, one does not hastren to criticise one's wife, who does most of the dishwasher loading, when referring to problems of this nature. One simply wonders what has happened, and tries to correct the result.

Also, I have used Clorox Clean-up and allowed it to soak the inside (which is, indeed, plastic). This also lightened things somewhat.

I wonder if the "plastic booster" dish detergent would be of use in this situation.

What Exit?
07-10-2006, 12:47 PM
There is a dishwasher product called Glisten for removing water staining (usually Orangey Brown). It does a great job and is relatively cheap. Under $10 for two packets IRC. We needed it often in the old house with well water.

Jim

Nanoda
07-10-2006, 12:50 PM
I've heard (don't have a dishwasher myself right now) that scrubbing with baking soda works well. At least, my dad was satisfied with the results the last time he tried it.

crazyjoe
07-10-2006, 01:14 PM
Ouch. I suppose it depends on the interior of your dishwasher. Porcelain may stand up to such an abrasive scrubbing. I am sure plastic would look like shit afterward.

I just did some reading up on Cascade Plastic Booster, and people claim that it also cleans stains from inside the dishwasher. I might have to order some of that.

CookingWithGas
07-10-2006, 01:31 PM
Ah, my good fellow, you see, one does not hastren to criticise one's wife. . . .Ah, yes, I'm quite familiar with the phenomenon, such as the time my white socks & underwear came out pink. . . .One false step and you will be washing dishes by hand the rest of your days.

spingears
07-10-2006, 04:55 PM
Ouch. I suppose it depends on the interior of your dishwasher. Porcelain may stand up to such an abrasive scrubbing. I am sure plastic would look like shit afterward.
I just did some reading up on Cascade Plastic Booster, and people claim that it also cleans stains from inside the dishwasher. I might have to order some of that.Looks like its use Plastic Booster till the stain comes out, next year?
Alternative is buy a new one and wipe the pasta sauce off the dishes BEFORE washing.

What Exit?
07-10-2006, 04:58 PM
There is a dishwasher product called Glisten for removing water staining (usually Orangey Brown). It does a great job and is relatively cheap. Under $10 for two packets IRC. We needed it often in the old house with well water.

Jim
Hello is this mike on?
Go to the Supermarket and look for Glisten (http://a-1catalog.com/glisdisclean.html). It is cheap and will probably work.

Kalhoun
07-10-2006, 05:18 PM
I've used something similar to Glisten. It's in a little bottle. You take off the protective sticker, put it in the silverware basket upside down, run the machine (EMPTY...NO DISHES PLEASE) and it comes out faaabulously clean.

I have very rusty water, so I know how ugly the interior can get. This stuff works.

AHunter3
07-10-2006, 08:37 PM
You probably don't want to know this, but our bathtub tiles, wall tiles, shower footmat and damn near everything except the surface of liquid clorox itself has a thin skimmy slippery layer of orange fungus. It's mildew of some sort.

I live in the land that just had 34 days of rain in June. Maybe we have varieties of fungus that hadn't hitherto evolved. But betcher ass that if it had an opportunity to spread, it woud've.

I wouldn't stand too close to it either.

Cartooniverse
07-10-2006, 08:47 PM
I understand that there's this product called "Glisten" that works exceptionally well.



:D

What Exit?
07-10-2006, 08:48 PM
You probably don't want to know this, but our bathtub tiles, wall tiles, shower footmat and damn near everything except the surface of liquid clorox itself has a thin skimmy slippery layer of orange fungus. It's mildew of some sort.

I live in the land that just had 34 days of rain in June. Maybe we have varieties of fungus that hadn't hitherto evolved. But betcher ass that if it had an opportunity to spread, it woud've.

I wouldn't stand too close to it either.
The Works will kill that crap, but it also might eat old grout. So if you choose to use it, use it in small experimental patches first.

Jim

susan
07-10-2006, 10:02 PM
What about Glisten?

What Exit?
07-10-2006, 10:10 PM
What about Glisten?
:D

easy e
07-11-2006, 08:13 AM
I homebrew, and on a message board about that, someone said they tried PBW (Powdered Brewers Wash) in their dishwasher once when they were out of soap. They said the dishes got really clean, and so did the dishwasher. If you have a nearby homebrew shop (and don't want to buy Glisten), maybe that would work.

UncleRojelio
07-11-2006, 08:37 AM
There is this product that is teh shitz for cleaning dishwasherz. I think it's called 'Shiney' or sumpthen like dat.

WhyNot
07-11-2006, 08:58 AM
:confused:

Why the hell do you care if the inside of your dishwasher is orange? Does it still wash dishes?


(I turned the inside of the dishwasher orange once. It washed itself off in about three washes, without any fancy cleaners or scrubbing. There's very little out there more caustic or better cleaning than dishwasher detergent itself.)

CalMeacham
07-11-2006, 09:19 AM
I know it's not rust in the water, because my toilet water was not orange, and I have a whole-house filtration system that's supposed to prevent that)

You say this, but I speak from experience in stating that you water may be discoloring your dishwasher even if this doesn't manifest itself elsewhere in the house. My wife's family's house used treated and filtered well water. The interior of their disdhwasher was an unbelievably dark and disgusting brown color. This showed up in none of the sinks or bathrooms (although the old bathtub did have bluish-green staining, presumably from the copper).

In our current house, using Massachusetts water ultimately from the Quabbin reservoir, our dishwasher has stained a light orangish brown, which we don't see elsewhere.

I gather that this came on suddenly, though. If so, I don't know what caused it. But is it possible this has been going on for some time, and you just noticed it?

boytyperanma
07-11-2006, 09:28 AM
Putting Tang in the the detergent place then running a cycle can work wonders for cleaning dishwashers of old stains.

For those of you with iron staining use a product with sodium-hydrosulfate such as iron out or rust raze. Follow the instructions.

What Exit?
07-11-2006, 09:39 AM
A browning agent common to well water besides Iron is Manganese*. This happens to a be a fairly common chemical in well water in the North East at least.
Iron is the most common staining agent and as mentioned a large amount of tomato sauce could cause problems but is not likely.

Jim {BTW: Glisten works well for Iron & Manganese staining and no, I do not work for or own stock in said company}

* Manganese should not be confused with Magnesium.

crazyjoe
07-11-2006, 09:44 AM
:confused:

Why the hell do you care if the inside of your dishwasher is orange? Does it still wash dishes?


(I turned the inside of the dishwasher orange once. It washed itself off in about three washes, without any fancy cleaners or scrubbing. There's very little out there more caustic or better cleaning than dishwasher detergent itself.)

Because, y'know, it's....orange. And the rest of it is white. Why do I care if the toilet bowl is orange if it still flushes the poo down? Well, it's an aesthetic thing.

Anyhow, someone here at work told me about this product called Glisten....why didn't any of you guys mention THAT?

WhyNot
07-11-2006, 09:47 AM
Because, y'know, it's....orange. And the rest of it is white. Why do I care if the toilet bowl is orange if it still flushes the poo down? Well, it's an aesthetic thing.

Anyhow, someone here at work told me about this product called Glisten....why didn't any of you guys mention THAT?
Well, yes, but my guests will see the inside of my toilet bowl at some time or another. I don't have them load my dishwasher for me, as a rule. ;)

Seriously, I know what you're saying, and I do get it, I just don't get it. My mother used to obsess over strange hidden bits of housekeeping that would just drive me nuts, and my husband's the same way. I just worry about the stuff everyone sees or could potentially make people sick. This isn't either, so I wouldn't worry about it. YMM,obviously,V

crazyjoe
07-11-2006, 12:41 PM
You say this, but I speak from experience in stating that you water may be discoloring your dishwasher even if this doesn't manifest itself elsewhere in the house. My wife's family's house used treated and filtered well water. The interior of their disdhwasher was an unbelievably dark and disgusting brown color. This showed up in none of the sinks or bathrooms (although the old bathtub did have bluish-green staining, presumably from the copper).

In our current house, using Massachusetts water ultimately from the Quabbin reservoir, our dishwasher has stained a light orangish brown, which we don't see elsewhere.

I gather that this came on suddenly, though. If so, I don't know what caused it. But is it possible this has been going on for some time, and you just noticed it?

Interesting info.

Yep, it came on suddenly, and the dishwasher is relatively new (less than 6 months old). Also, nothing like this has ever happened to our old dishwasher, even before I installed the filtration system and we'd occasionally get orange water.

It's also city water, which is chlorinated, fluoridated, and fornicated (not really) 6 ways to midnight. So I don't expect this sort of thing to be a result of the water.

vetbridge
07-11-2006, 03:02 PM
If tomatoe sauce is the culprit, I would advise Tincture of Time. Either that, or Glisten.