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Shop Towels, Whatcha Use

zmotorsports

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Northern Utah
A couple of guys I work with and I were discussing shop towels today as our uniform company was picking up soiled shop rags and leaving clean ones. They asked me what I was using at my home shop and whether or not I cleaned my own or had them laundered. It got me wondering what the consensus is on the forum. What does everyone use for rags/towels in their shops.

I will start. At work we have used the red square cloth shop towels even back when I started 25+ years ago. The laundry company that did our uniforms and rags at work made me a pretty good deal on an exchange program for home. I did this for several years until I realized how hard it was to keep the red fibers out of components like hydraulic pumps and such as work. I would clean parts and lay them out to be reassembled on clean red shop rags. Then upon installation it seems as though I was spending at least that much time again, spraying down the parts and blowing them off with compressed air to get rid of the red fibers. I also started to notice similar issues when doing automatic transmissions at my home shop.

I started using just regular paper towels when performing these specific tasks to eleviate the possibility of getting these fibers into the components. Then one day it hit me why am I going through this extra work when I should just use heavier paper towels and not have the expense of cleaning the red ones.

So about 15 years ago now I bought a couple of those Tork center pull dispensers and have one at each end of the shop. This is the style.
vgtwe9.jpg


I fill them with the Kimberly Clark Wypall blue heavy duty towels that I buy from my local NAPA. I purchase them in the two packs that are shrinkwrapped together and get a better price on them.
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I then also buy a case at a time of the smaller Kimberly Clark red Crew Chief ones in the box that pull out. These work great in the enclosed trailer, in the coach, the back of the Jeep and on my lower shelf of my toolcart for when I am in between the two pull dispensers and need one as my trusty Snap-On toolcart seems to be always at my side.
o7sgg0.jpg


So let's hear from everyone else. What do you use?

Mike.
 
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AStrahota

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Minneapolis Southern Suburbs, MN
I mostly use WypAll L40 wipes.

05701-WYPALL-L40-Wipers.jpg


They have great quality however they are quite expensive.

Sellars has nice wipes of similar fashion but not as high quality. For the price though, I am very pleased
 

shooting4life

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Nov 19, 2012
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I use the blue shop paper towels they sell everywhere. I also have an automatic paper towel dispenser like they have in bathrooms above the sink.
 

cbrxfr67

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Aug 6, 2013
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I use these,.....manager thought tossing several cases in the trash was a good idea, so I wrangled them away from the guys and took them home. Good stuff for just about everything in the garage.

https://scontent-a-dfw.**.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn2/1465400_10202502014774915_537516285_n.jpg
 
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zmotorsports

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Northern Utah
I use the blue shop paper towels they sell everywhere. I also have an automatic paper towel dispenser like they have in bathrooms above the sink.

Are you talking about these, the Scott's towels on the traditional paper towel style rolls?
k2ebtu.jpg


This seems to be the winner among many of the guys I work with for their home needs.

Mike.
 

ezriderga

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NW GA
Bought an 8 roll box of paper towels from Sams Club. Install on my automatic towel dispenser. Lasts a long time. Cheap and easy for quick clean-up.

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Fizbin

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Jan 11, 2012
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I use regular paper towels, because I get them for free at work. I'm a housekeeper for a vacation rental company and just take what's left of the unused roll that the guests leave (I have a whole cabinet full now :lol:).

But once I can finally quit this crappy job, I'll be using the Scott Shop Towels, like everyone else. :D
 

NUTTSGT

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Northern Central Ohio
Are you talking about these, the Scott's towels on the traditional paper towel style rolls?
k2ebtu.jpg


This seems to be the winner among many of the guys I work with for their home needs.

Mike.

Yep, that's what I use here in my garage and I have a roll of them in the truck too.

Just have them on the paper towel rack.




I also have a few red towels and some blue "surgery" towels.
 

blacksporty

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So Cal
I take the ones from my print shop home and then bring them back when they are dirty, I am the owner so that is okay. They are grey cloth and not very much lint because lint=bad print job. We do have some white cloth lint free for cleaning certain areas at the shop but I don't take those home.
 

383 240z

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Findley Twp. Allegheny Co.
I use the scotts in the clean/build room. Red rags out in the regular shop. I wait till I have a few hundred (not kidding) of them, then take them to the local laundramat. They have 2 washers and one dryer just for work clothes and rags. I store the clean ones in a cardboard box and the dirty ones in a large steel box with steel lid. It was the closest I gould find to a fire box. Keith
 

tomsmith

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+1 on the Scotts Blue towel. You can get a great deal at Costco sometimes.

I also have a box of white cotton towels from Costco (in the workshop aisle) that I use when I need to really scrub something. Those get laundered in the local laundromat. If they are really oily, I will hand wash them in the soaker tub - don't want to ruin the laundromat or risk an explosion.
 

beatcad

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NOVA
yeah, I also buy the 2 pack rolls of the blue scott towels for the garage.
but when ever I go to HF(maybe every 2 or 3 months) i'll buy a couple packs of the red shop rags 'cause theyre so cheap. and now and than at wal*mart or auto zone.
I've got enough of those to probably last me until spring.
they're cheap. I throw those suckers away.
 

Falcon67

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Merkel, TX
I used to stock the blue Scott towels. Got them at Sams - and the local Sams decided not to carry them anymore. Dammit. For nice blue cloth shop rags, we locals hit up the local medical cleaning facility for bags of surgical towels. Those are great - no color bleed, they come washed/sterile and can't be reused by the hospital. Big bag runs $10~20 depending.
 
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djwyman

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Nov 2, 2013
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Are you talking about these, the Scott's towels on the traditional paper towel style rolls?
k2ebtu.jpg


This seems to be the winner among many of the guys I work with for their home needs.

Mike.

I use these...hell I am a bachler...I use these as regular paper towels too around my house and I have gojo cherry hand cleaner next to my bathroom sink.
 

ZRX61

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fitz11

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Fox Valley, WI
Does anybody use or have a source for heavy duty shop type towels that fit in a multi fold dispenser like you would see in bathrooms?
 

Jagmandave

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Overland Park, Ks.
I've bought the red shop towels from Harbor Freight in the past, but the last bunch I got were real waxy feeling and didn't absorb well. I went thru two packs of them and just threw them away when they got dirty enough. I tried washing a few clean ones just to see if it changed the texture and feel of them but it didn't seem to.

I think I'm going to wind up switching to those blue paper towels once I've gone thru all the HF ones.

I still have a few hundred red shop towels from 40 years of carrying one home in my back pocket, those I take to the laundromat till I wear them out, once they're gone I'll probably be strictly on paper towels.
 

jvitez

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Big Sky Country, Canada
Mostly dollar store paper towels. If I go through a whole roll during one garage session it only costs me a buck. I also use the blue Scott shop towels like lots of others but I use them sparingly. I've got some red cloth shop towels too but they bleed like a stuck pig so I use them and throw them out: not washing them ever again!
 

csp

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Franktown, CO
I also have a few red towels and some blue "surgery" towels.

People would be shocked at how many of those blue surgical towels get thrown away. When they open a package for surgery, any that don't get used are headed for the garbage as they are no longer sterile. I have piles of them as my wife is the charge nurse for a surgical center.
 

dirtybiker

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WI
First time posting
I use these. The main reason is because at a previous job I used to make the jugs. I like it also because I can reload it. I think I will also put up a paper towel dispenser.

55208_blueshoptowels_bucket.jpg


I am also surprised no buddy and mentioned the wife’s wedding dress or old towels. I have a box of old shirts, towels that I use for the really bad stuff or polishing. I just throw them away. You can also get clothing sometimes really cheap from yard sales. I sometimes can get bag of clothing for 10 bucks. Most of the time they just want to get rid of them.
 

MN4x4

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Minnesnowta
I keep a roll of regular white paper towels AND a roll of the blue Scott towels on magnetic holders on the end of my Shop Cart. They're always near me and I can grab whichever one is appropriate for the task at hand.
 

Jbizzle

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Oct 14, 2012
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New Mexico
I use the box of Scott towels that you can buy at the Home Depot paint department. We use them at work also in a busy aviation shop.
 

GTO

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NJ,FL
I have a center pull dispenser and also use red rags and old t-shirts.
 

malibulvr

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Lockport, NY
I must be the only guy to use tore up old clothes, towels, and sheets. I can't afford all that high falutin store bought towel nonsense.
 

junkman104

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Cherokee County N.C.
I've bought the red shop towels from Harbor Freight in the past, but the last bunch I got were real waxy feeling and didn't absorb well.

I had some of them also but they are back to the regular old ones again. I use them until they wont clean my hands, then use them to clean spills and drips on the floor before tossing.
 
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zmotorsports

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For heavy duty stuff, I use these:

S1-5-41041-2.jpg


For regular cleaning, I use plain 'ole Bounty paper towels that I get from Sam's Club.

Billy T.
[email protected]

Yep, these are the same ones only on the center pull rolls that I use. They seem quite a bit stronger than the Scott's paper towels and hold up well.

I actually have "stages" of dirty paper towels when working. I grab new ones out of the dispenser and they are the ones that I have in my apron pocket for immediate hand cleaning and tool cleaning. When they get soiled/dirty enough that I don't want to use them on my hands they progress to the stack for wiping grease/oil off of parts before they go into the parts washer. This keeps my solvent cleaner longer without gumming up the filters prematurely. From there they generally go into the garbage but if they happen to still not quite be used up and have some cleaning ability left in them I use them to wipe up drips or spills from the floor. Then they hit the garbage.

I try to make certain they are completely filthy and can hold no more oil/grease to get my money out of them.

Mike.
 
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