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Date:         Sun, 21 Jul 1996 23:30:30 -0500
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         farchmir@milwaukee.tec.wi.us (Randy Farchmin)
Subject:      Re: Water Wetter: Again

>dont all soaps have the dreaded phosphates?

Nope. Ordinary soap is usually a sodium or potassium salt of a fatty acid, such as sodium stearate. They are classed as anionic detergents and will form a "metallic plate" precipitate (hard water scum) with calcium and magnesium ions. There are also cationic detergents, such as the quaternary ammonium chlorides. Both types ionize when dissolved in an aqueous solution. Whether the ions would react with aluminum alloy, I couldn't say [actually, I'm just too lazy to look it up.]

Randy Farchmin ---> farchmir@milwaukee.tec.wi.us Dept of Natural(?) Sciences Milwaukee Area Technical College


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