PS---YOU DON'T HAVE TO RINSE F10 SC.
You just spray it and let it dry. If you want to wipe you can, but make sure it stays wet for a few minutes at least (10 minutes at least if you are trying to get rid of nastier viruses).
Also, although white vinegar does kill some things, it does not have the disinfecting power that many seem to believe it does...I too was a wishful member of the vinegar club, until I read a bunch of studies...and as far as natural goes, it is great, but it isn't going to kill staph or PDD (viruses are quite resistant to vinegar, and in terms of bacteria, it kills 70 (ish)%, as opposed to bleach which is more than 99% effective (albeit dangerous for birds)...Vinegar is also largely dependent upon the act of scrubbing and even then, It kills a very limited window of microbes when compared to something more powerful. F10 does a MUCH better job in the virus/bacteria department, and you can adjust the concentration depending on your needs.
http://www.f10products.co.uk/ebooks/hh326a/files/assets/common/downloads_52e48c86/publication.pdf
Page 6 lists what it kills- and although this product was put out by the F10 people, there are MANY professionals who have used it safely for years, plus, studies have backed up these findings. I don't work for the company lol. I just really love the product.
I wanted my parents to start using it as an alternative to other cleaners (even though I don't live with them) so here is an excerpt of the email "sales pitch" I sent to them lol:
"It is called f10sc (super concentrate) and 200 ML is $27.27 on Amazon, but you only need to add 2ml to 17oz of water in order to achieve the 1:250 mix ratio (
[FONT="]200ml/2(based on 2ml per 17 oz)=100x17oz=1700 oz)[/FONT].
[FONT="]That means you can make 1700 ounces (or 13.2 gallons) [/FONT][FONT="]of cleaning solution per 200 ml bottle of concentrate(17 oz water +2 ml solution is what I am using). A 1 GALLON REFILL OF Windex is almost $14.00....soooo for the same price (roughly $28.00) you can get 2 gallons of bird-killing Windex, or 13.2 gallons of bird-safe f10sc! If you increase dilution to 1:500 (still viable) then that number stretches even further! Additionally, after mixing the solution, it continues to work for up to 6 months (in diluted form) and years in concentrated form (assuming it is not compromised by puncture etc). I went to the pharmacy at Walmart and they gave me a free 1ml syringe which I use to measure my 2ml addition to my 17 oz. I mixed it without gloves and I have had no issues with skin irritation.[/FONT]
It is totally safe when used at recommended concentrations (as low as 1:100 and as high as 1:500 parts per liter ). It doesn't produce harmful fumes, is non-corrosive, non-irritating, non-aldehyde (sp?) and DOESN'T NEED TO BE RINSED!
It kills Salmonella, MRSA, mold, fungi and viruses in 10 minutes at a 1:250 dilution ratio and it can be used on fabrics in laundry as well as hard surfaces. It is a veterinary grade disinfectant that can be used to sterilize surgical equipment at higher concentrations. Also, "
[FONT="]Unlike many other products F10 stays active providing an ongoing residual effect."-- Numerous studies were conducted to back up this statement and no traces were found in bird muscle, blood,kidney and urine etc after adding it to drinking water in 1:250 dilutions for 6 weeks! [/FONT]
In the US, the label on the bottle still has to contain a crazy chemical warning, but a large portion of vets use this as the disinfectant. When the company was contacted, they indicated that it was safe to use around pets and without gloves etc but that the EPA etc requires that label here for anything within a certain category due to litigation etc in this country specifically- the precautions listed are not the same in England or Europe in general. It can even be used in a nebulizer with birds (by a vet who knows what they are doing) to kill asperagillosis (sp?)- It also can be added to reptile drinking water to prevent growth or nasty things (again, only by a vet who knows what they are doing). When diluted, it is used as a hand disinfectant for people in multi-bird settings (between birds). It kills something called parrot beak and feather disease (very resilient virus) faster and more efficiently than bleach!"