Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
🧽 u.s. pumice company jan-12 scouring stick-559004: ultimate cleaning tool logo

🧽 U.S. PUMICE Company JAN-12 Scouring Stick-559004: Ultimate Cleaning Tool Review

3

Β·

Excellent

Revainrating 5 out of 5Β Β 
RatingΒ 
5.0
🧹 Cleaning Tools, 🧻 Household Supplies

View on AmazonView on Π―M

Media

(1)
img 1 attached to 🧽 U.S. PUMICE Company JAN-12 Scouring Stick-559004: Ultimate Cleaning Tool

Description of 🧽 U.S. PUMICE Company JAN-12 Scouring Stick-559004: Ultimate Cleaning Tool

Pumice Scouring Stick. Stick size : 5 3/4"x 3/4"x 1 1/4". The country of origin is China.

Reviews

Global ratings 3
  • 5
    3
  • 4
    0
  • 3
    0
  • 2
    0
  • 1
    0

Type of review

This is a line from Pete Seeger's "The Faucets Are Dripping". When I lived in Wisconsin I bought these pumice sticks at my local hardware store so I used them many times. Now I live in France and can't find them anywhere so I ordered two from Revain and sent them to a friend in the US who was about to go to France. This really is the best way to remove hard water deposits in sinks, bathtubs and toilets. The stick dissolves as you use it and for a bad running toilet I only used half of the…

Pros
  • Very Impressive
Cons
  • Damaged

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Overpriced but great product

I have leaking toilets due to limescale and I get horribly hard water/brown rust stains in my toilet from running water. No toilet bowl cleaner or scrubbing brush, by any stretch of the imagination, leaves a dent in them. In fact, they're more like extensions. This product is the only one I've found that removes them completely. And believe me, I've tried A LOT! Of course you need a lot of effort to raise them when they grow like mine. But it works great and I will keep buying until I get a…

Pros
  • Durable finish
Cons
  • Questionable purchase for seniors

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Buy it. Buy two! - Cleaning tools

I moved into an apartment with three toilets. They were pretty disgusting. stained glass. Tried removing stains with a brush. chlorox. and then I tried to dress her up with a blue shell. None of this worked. I googled the best way to remove stains and came across a pumice stone. I bought it from Amazon for about 5 euros. It was worth every penny. I had no hope. I thought it would scratch the porcelain. I didn't care because (a) it wasn't my toilet and I'm pretty impatient (I know it's a shame)…

Pros
  • Ideal for a small house
Cons
  • Disappear