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Laundry ball

A laundry ball or washing ball is a product made of solid, insoluble material promoted as a substitute for laundry detergent. Producers of laundry balls often make pseudoscientific claims about their mechanisms of action and exaggerate the extent of their benefits.[1][2]

The Swedish "Magicball" is an example of a pseudoscientific washing ball product.

Washing with laundry balls is as effective or less effective than washing without detergent.[3][4] Their observed cleaning effects can largely be attributed to the mechanical interactions with the laundry or to using hot water instead of cold.[3][5]

The Federal Trade Commission has taken action against manufacturers for making misleading claims,[6] while customer protection organizations have recommended against buying this type of product.

Types edit

Laundry balls come in several shapes: disks, spheres and doughnuts.[7][8] Some contain ceramic pieces, magnetic material, or coloured liquid claimed to be "activated water",[7][8] none of which have been demonstrated to improve effectiveness.[8] Some balls can be refilled with pellets of detergent or other ingredients.[9][10]

In the United States, laundry balls have been sold on home shopping channels or by participants in multilevel marketing.[1][7] They can also be found in retail stores with an ecological or environmental focus.[7] During the initial marketing boom, balls were manufactured for other market niches, like washing cars.[7]

Claimed mechanisms of action edit

Manufacturers rarely agree on why their laundry balls work, which suggests that each manufacturer makes these claims up.[7][11] Some claims are not backed by science, while others are an exaggeration of benefits.[2] Balls that contain detergents may offer more cleaning power than water alone because their ingredients are comparable to normal washing powder, but in smaller quantities.

The effect of the laundry balls may be explained by simple mechanical action and by the usage of hotter water. Some manufacturers claim that their products reduce energy consumption, but their pamphlets recommend using hot water.[3] Hot water will clean some types of spots better than cold water,[3][5] leading some people to conclude that the balls worked.

Although laundry balls are marketed as economical, environmentally friendly alternatives that can reduce water and energy consumption,[3][7] they have not been demonstrated to be more effective than washing without detergent.[7][3][4][5][8][12] The mechanical action of the laundry balls can help clean some types of spots,[3][5] but a golf ball will achieve the same effect for much less money.[2]

Apart from issues with effectiveness, there is also a risk of the balls breaking open during washing, which could damage the machinery of the washing machine.[4]

Infrared edit

Some manufacturers claim that the components inside their balls emit far infrared rays, which are claimed to reduce the surface tension of water and facilitate washing.[8] The claim of emitting infrared is not false, as almost all materials emit "far infrared waves" at room temperature, in other words, heat radiation.[3] It is also true that heating reduces the surface tension of water, but the effect of the radiation emitted by the balls is negligible compared to the radiation emitted by the internal walls of the washing machine or by the water, especially if the water is hot.[3]

Magnetic properties edit

Magnetic water softeners claim that their magnetic fields can help remove scale from the washing machine and pipes and prevent new limescale from adhering.[11] Some companies claim to remove hardness ions from hard water or to precipitate the molecules in the water so they will not "stick" to the pipes or to reduce the surface tension of water.[11] The claims are dubious, the scientific basis is unclear, the working mechanism is vaguely defined and understudied, and high-quality studies report negative results.[11] The reputation of these products is further damaged by the pseudoscientific explanations that promoters keep putting forward.[11]

Changes to water structure edit

Some magnetic products claim that they "change the molecular structure of water",[12] a pseudoscientific claim with no real scientific basis.[2] There is no such thing as "magnetized water".[11] Water is not paramagnetic, so its water molecules do not align in the presence of a magnetic field.[11] Water is weakly diamagnetic (so it is repelled by magnets), but only to an extent so small that it is undetectable to most instruments.[13]

Special detergent edit

Some balls are refillable with small pellets of detergent which are sold only by the manufacturer of the ball. Critics question whether the amount and type of detergent released by these balls is sufficient to generate significant cleaning effects.[9][10]

Customer protection edit

In 1997, Amway offered a ceramic washing disk on its catalog but removed it after concluding that it had "no measurable impact on overall cleaning."[1]

In 1997, Trade-Net sold a laundry ball product (the Blue Laundry Ball) in various states. Trade-Net claimed that the blue liquid inside their balls was structured water "that emits a negative charge through the walls of the container into your laundry water." "This causes the water molecule cluster to disassociate, allowing much smaller individual water molecules to penetrate the innermost part of the fabric." Dennis Barnum, a professor of inorganic chemistry at Portland State University, said that the liquid was just water with a blue dye and could not possibly have the effect claimed by the manufacturer. Barnum also said that the claims were "gibberish" and used scientific terms in ways that sounded educated to the layman but did not make any real sense. The Oregonian tested the balls and found they washed marginally better than hot water with no detergent and worse than using detergent.[14]

After complaints, Trade-Net's claims were investigated by customer protection departments in Utah, Oregon, and Florida, among others, and the company was prohibited from making certain claims, including that "such product cleans as well as conventional laundry detergent". Trade-Net offered a 'new' laundry ball product after this, but were forced to pay fines,[15] including $190,000 to Oregon's Department of Justice, $10,000 to Utah and then in April 1999, $155,000 to the states of New York, Arizona, Arkansas, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma and the FTC. The company disappeared shortly thereafter.[16] The Federal Trade Commission has levied fines against other companies for similar fraudulent claims.[17] However, other companies kept selling similar products over the Internet.[18]

The judge ruling against Trade-Net, issued in April 1999, said the manufacturers failed to substantiate their claims and hadn't informed consumers about reports showing that the claims were incorrect.[19][20]

The Australian Consumers' Association published a report in the April 1998 issue of its magazine Choice. It concluded that laundry balls were no better than cold water.[3]

The US Federal Trade Commission published in 1999 about laundry balls, rings, and discs: "Tests show that these gadgets do little more than clean out your wallet. At best, they’re marginally better than washing clothes in hot water alone and not as effective as washing them with laundry detergent. At worst, the products are completely useless."[12]

In 2000 the magazine Good Housekeeping tested several laundry balls sold in the US and concluded that "these gizmos do little more than clean out your wallet."[18]

In April 2009 the Italian consumer association Altroconsumo carried a small test and concluded that laundry balls didn't wash better than plain water.[21]

In 2009 the Spanish customer protection organization OCU studied ecobolas (a type of laundry ball marketed in Spain). It compared the efficacy of the laundry ball, normal detergent, and no detergent at all. It concluded that laundry balls were no better than using just water, and it recommended that consumers simply use a minimum amount of detergent.[5]

In November 2011, the Hong Kong Consumer Council published a report on the effect of using washing liquid, washing powder, and washing balls. The former two were effective in removing stains, while the washing balls were not more effective than plain water.[22]

Some organizations recommending against their use are Consumers Union,[8] International Fabricare Institute (now called Drycleaning and Laundry Institute),[8] Maytag,[8] Soap and Detergent Association,[8] and Spanish OCU.[5]

In February 2011, the Spanish National Institute of Consume (Instituto Nacional del Consumo INC) ordered 14 manufacturers to cease their deceiving advertisement after testing the wash balls and concluding that they are as effective, or even less effective, than washing with water alone.[4]

In August 2012, the Portuguese Consumer Rights Council requested a ban on the washing balls because none of the advantages advertised were proven in tests.[23]

The Australian customer advocacy group Choice Australia gave a "Shonky Award" to Nanosmart Laundry Balls in October 2015, stating that they "don't work" and that they should be renamed "Nano-not-so-smart" after testing the balls against plain water and finding they had no effect and that their scientific claims were simply untrue. Choice Australia states that they will refer the product to the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission for investigation over Nanosmart's misleading claims.[24]

By making very vague claims, marketers can continue to sell laundry balls without running afoul of customer protection laws that require veracity in advertisement.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Adams, Cecil (1997-07-25). . The Straight Dope. p. 1. Archived from the original on 2008-05-26. Retrieved 2008-02-25.
  2. ^ a b c d Michael Shermer (January 2004), "Bunkum! Broad-mindedness is a virtue when investigating extraordinary claims, but often they turn out to be pure bunk (Skeptic column)", Scientific American, p. 36
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Dorothy Stein (1997-10-27). . Faculty of Food, Clothing and Hospitality Management at Manchester Metropolitan University. Archived from the original on 2010-09-06. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
  4. ^ a b c d Sanidad frena el timo de la 'ecobola'. El Instituto Nacional de Consumo requiere a 14 fabricantes que acaben con la publicidad engañosa de estos productos, Público, Ainhoa Iriberri, 5 February 2011, Spanish. "The Instituto Nacional del Consumo (INC) has required the manufacturers of laundry balls (...) (also called ecoballs) to cease their deceiving publicity (...) The requirement has been issued after the making (...) of a study on 14 brands of ecoballs, made to find out the most obvious: if it's true that they are effective to wash clothes. The work results offer no doubt: the laundry balls do clean, yes, but the same or even less than water."
  5. ^ a b c d e f , Compra Maestra (in Spanish) (340), OCU Organización de Consumidores y Usuarios, September 2009, archived from the original on 2010-12-22, retrieved 2011-01-03, [translation] In conclusion, the results of the Ecobola are far from those obtained with detergent. We can well attribute its "washing efficacy" to the mechanical action of the washing machine and the temperature of the washing water... with which using this product is practically the same as washing only with water. (...) The advice of the OCU: if you want to spend less money and reduce residues, choose one of the detergents recommended in our last analysis and experiment until finding the minimal doses that gives you good results.
  6. ^ See, for example: Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitutes Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlements with FTC and Eleven States and Dallas Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitute Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlement with FTC and Six States, Federal Trade Commission
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Roahn H. Wynar, "Laundry Balls", in Michael Shermer, Pat Linse (ed.), The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience, ABC-CLIO, pp. 130–131
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Cheryl Mendelson (2005), Laundry: the home comforts book of caring for clothes and linens (illustrated ed.), Simon and Schuster, pp. 82, 83, ISBN 978-0-7432-7145-5
  9. ^ a b grownupgreen. 2006-11-17. Archived from the original on 2007-06-23. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
  10. ^ a b . Jeremy Johnstone. 2008-05-11. Archived from the original on 2016-10-28. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Stephen Lower. "Magnetic water treatment pseudoscience". Chem1.com. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  12. ^ a b c FTC Consumer Alert (1 April 1999), Wash Daze: Laundry Gadgets Won't Lighten the Load, archived from the original on 14 April 2013, retrieved 7 December 2011
  13. ^ Stephen Lower, Magnetized water: pseudoscientific snake oil, Chem1.com, retrieved 2011-12-19
  14. ^ AP (1997-05-11), , The Columbian, archived from the original on 2016-03-04
  15. ^ . Federal Trade Commission. April 22, 1999. Archived from the original on June 6, 2010. Retrieved July 21, 2011.
  16. ^ Sources: * "Erwin Richard Annau – Stipulated Final Judgment". Ftc.gov. 1999-04-22. Retrieved 2010-07-09. * Circuit court of Oregon, Marion county (12 September 1997), , Oregon Department of Justice, archived from the original on 17 December 2005
  17. ^ See for example: . Federal Trade Commission. July 1, 1999. Archived from the original on November 3, 2011. Retrieved July 21, 2011.
  18. ^ a b , Good Housekeeping, 2000-01-01, archived from the original on 2014-06-11(registration required)
  19. ^ AP (1999-03-22), , Skeptic, archived from the original on 2014-06-11 (require registration)
  20. ^ AP (1999-04-25), , The Columbian, archived from the original on 2014-06-11 (registration required)
  21. ^ . Altroconsumo.it. Archived from the original on 2013-05-27. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  22. ^ . Hong Kong Consumer Council. 2011-11-15. Archived from the original on 2011-11-28. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  23. ^ DECO exige retirada do mercado das "ecobolas", Diário de Notícias
  24. ^ "Shonkys 2015 – Nanosmart Cleaning Balls". Choice Australia. 2015-10-07. Archived from the original on 2015-10-14. Retrieved 2015-10-07.

External links edit

  • Do laundry balls really work?, July 25, 1997, The Straight Dope
  • The ABI Laundry Ball and The Laundry Solution and The Laundry Clean Disk & about twenty others just like them!, an entry in The Skeptic's Dictionary
  • , November 17, 1998, CBC News, Marketplace program on scams section.

laundry, ball, this, article, about, plastic, cleaning, devices, used, washing, machines, detergent, pouches, laundry, detergent, detergent, dispensing, devices, dispensing, ball, device, used, dryers, dryer, ball, laundry, ball, washing, ball, product, made, . This article is about plastic cleaning devices used in washing machines For detergent pouches see laundry detergent pod For detergent dispensing devices see dispensing ball For the device used in dryers see dryer ball A laundry ball or washing ball is a product made of solid insoluble material promoted as a substitute for laundry detergent Producers of laundry balls often make pseudoscientific claims about their mechanisms of action and exaggerate the extent of their benefits 1 2 The Swedish Magicball is an example of a pseudoscientific washing ball product Washing with laundry balls is as effective or less effective than washing without detergent 3 4 Their observed cleaning effects can largely be attributed to the mechanical interactions with the laundry or to using hot water instead of cold 3 5 The Federal Trade Commission has taken action against manufacturers for making misleading claims 6 while customer protection organizations have recommended against buying this type of product Contents 1 Types 2 Claimed mechanisms of action 2 1 Infrared 2 2 Magnetic properties 2 3 Changes to water structure 2 4 Special detergent 3 Customer protection 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksTypes editLaundry balls come in several shapes disks spheres and doughnuts 7 8 Some contain ceramic pieces magnetic material or coloured liquid claimed to be activated water 7 8 none of which have been demonstrated to improve effectiveness 8 Some balls can be refilled with pellets of detergent or other ingredients 9 10 In the United States laundry balls have been sold on home shopping channels or by participants in multilevel marketing 1 7 They can also be found in retail stores with an ecological or environmental focus 7 During the initial marketing boom balls were manufactured for other market niches like washing cars 7 Claimed mechanisms of action editManufacturers rarely agree on why their laundry balls work which suggests that each manufacturer makes these claims up 7 11 Some claims are not backed by science while others are an exaggeration of benefits 2 Balls that contain detergents may offer more cleaning power than water alone because their ingredients are comparable to normal washing powder but in smaller quantities The effect of the laundry balls may be explained by simple mechanical action and by the usage of hotter water Some manufacturers claim that their products reduce energy consumption but their pamphlets recommend using hot water 3 Hot water will clean some types of spots better than cold water 3 5 leading some people to conclude that the balls worked Although laundry balls are marketed as economical environmentally friendly alternatives that can reduce water and energy consumption 3 7 they have not been demonstrated to be more effective than washing without detergent 7 3 4 5 8 12 The mechanical action of the laundry balls can help clean some types of spots 3 5 but a golf ball will achieve the same effect for much less money 2 Apart from issues with effectiveness there is also a risk of the balls breaking open during washing which could damage the machinery of the washing machine 4 Infrared edit Some manufacturers claim that the components inside their balls emit far infrared rays which are claimed to reduce the surface tension of water and facilitate washing 8 The claim of emitting infrared is not false as almost all materials emit far infrared waves at room temperature in other words heat radiation 3 It is also true that heating reduces the surface tension of water but the effect of the radiation emitted by the balls is negligible compared to the radiation emitted by the internal walls of the washing machine or by the water especially if the water is hot 3 Magnetic properties edit Main article Magnetic water treatment Magnetic water softeners claim that their magnetic fields can help remove scale from the washing machine and pipes and prevent new limescale from adhering 11 Some companies claim to remove hardness ions from hard water or to precipitate the molecules in the water so they will not stick to the pipes or to reduce the surface tension of water 11 The claims are dubious the scientific basis is unclear the working mechanism is vaguely defined and understudied and high quality studies report negative results 11 The reputation of these products is further damaged by the pseudoscientific explanations that promoters keep putting forward 11 Changes to water structure edit Some magnetic products claim that they change the molecular structure of water 12 a pseudoscientific claim with no real scientific basis 2 There is no such thing as magnetized water 11 Water is not paramagnetic so its water molecules do not align in the presence of a magnetic field 11 Water is weakly diamagnetic so it is repelled by magnets but only to an extent so small that it is undetectable to most instruments 13 Special detergent edit Some balls are refillable with small pellets of detergent which are sold only by the manufacturer of the ball Critics question whether the amount and type of detergent released by these balls is sufficient to generate significant cleaning effects 9 10 Customer protection editIn 1997 Amway offered a ceramic washing disk on its catalog but removed it after concluding that it had no measurable impact on overall cleaning 1 In 1997 Trade Net sold a laundry ball product the Blue Laundry Ball in various states Trade Net claimed that the blue liquid inside their balls was structured water that emits a negative charge through the walls of the container into your laundry water This causes the water molecule cluster to disassociate allowing much smaller individual water molecules to penetrate the innermost part of the fabric Dennis Barnum a professor of inorganic chemistry at Portland State University said that the liquid was just water with a blue dye and could not possibly have the effect claimed by the manufacturer Barnum also said that the claims were gibberish and used scientific terms in ways that sounded educated to the layman but did not make any real sense The Oregonian tested the balls and found they washed marginally better than hot water with no detergent and worse than using detergent 14 After complaints Trade Net s claims were investigated by customer protection departments in Utah Oregon and Florida among others and the company was prohibited from making certain claims including that such product cleans as well as conventional laundry detergent Trade Net offered a new laundry ball product after this but were forced to pay fines 15 including 190 000 to Oregon s Department of Justice 10 000 to Utah and then in April 1999 155 000 to the states of New York Arizona Arkansas Hawaii Idaho Illinois Michigan Missouri Nebraska Nevada Oklahoma and the FTC The company disappeared shortly thereafter 16 The Federal Trade Commission has levied fines against other companies for similar fraudulent claims 17 However other companies kept selling similar products over the Internet 18 The judge ruling against Trade Net issued in April 1999 said the manufacturers failed to substantiate their claims and hadn t informed consumers about reports showing that the claims were incorrect 19 20 The Australian Consumers Association published a report in the April 1998 issue of its magazine Choice It concluded that laundry balls were no better than cold water 3 The US Federal Trade Commission published in 1999 about laundry balls rings and discs Tests show that these gadgets do little more than clean out your wallet At best they re marginally better than washing clothes in hot water alone and not as effective as washing them with laundry detergent At worst the products are completely useless 12 In 2000 the magazine Good Housekeeping tested several laundry balls sold in the US and concluded that these gizmos do little more than clean out your wallet 18 In April 2009 the Italian consumer association Altroconsumo carried a small test and concluded that laundry balls didn t wash better than plain water 21 In 2009 the Spanish customer protection organization OCU studied ecobolas a type of laundry ball marketed in Spain It compared the efficacy of the laundry ball normal detergent and no detergent at all It concluded that laundry balls were no better than using just water and it recommended that consumers simply use a minimum amount of detergent 5 In November 2011 the Hong Kong Consumer Council published a report on the effect of using washing liquid washing powder and washing balls The former two were effective in removing stains while the washing balls were not more effective than plain water 22 Some organizations recommending against their use are Consumers Union 8 International Fabricare Institute now called Drycleaning and Laundry Institute 8 Maytag 8 Soap and Detergent Association 8 and Spanish OCU 5 In February 2011 the Spanish National Institute of Consume Instituto Nacional del Consumo INC ordered 14 manufacturers to cease their deceiving advertisement after testing the wash balls and concluding that they are as effective or even less effective than washing with water alone 4 In August 2012 the Portuguese Consumer Rights Council requested a ban on the washing balls because none of the advantages advertised were proven in tests 23 The Australian customer advocacy group Choice Australia gave a Shonky Award to Nanosmart Laundry Balls in October 2015 stating that they don t work and that they should be renamed Nano not so smart after testing the balls against plain water and finding they had no effect and that their scientific claims were simply untrue Choice Australia states that they will refer the product to the Australian Competition amp Consumer Commission for investigation over Nanosmart s misleading claims 24 By making very vague claims marketers can continue to sell laundry balls without running afoul of customer protection laws that require veracity in advertisement 7 See also editDryer ball Stainless steel soap List of topics characterized as pseudoscienceReferences edit a b c Adams Cecil 1997 07 25 Do laundry balls really work The Straight Dope p 1 Archived from the original on 2008 05 26 Retrieved 2008 02 25 a b c d Michael Shermer January 2004 Bunkum Broad mindedness is a virtue when investigating extraordinary claims but often they turn out to be pure bunk Skeptic column Scientific American p 36 a b c d e f g h i j Dorothy Stein 1997 10 27 Laundry Balls Faculty of Food Clothing and Hospitality Management at Manchester Metropolitan University Archived from the original on 2010 09 06 Retrieved 2010 07 09 a b c d Sanidad frena el timo de la ecobola El Instituto Nacional de Consumo requiere a 14 fabricantes que acaben con la publicidad enganosa de estos productos Publico Ainhoa Iriberri 5 February 2011 Spanish The Instituto Nacional del Consumo INC has required the manufacturers of laundry balls also called ecoballs to cease their deceiving publicity The requirement has been issued after the making of a study on 14 brands of ecoballs made to find out the most obvious if it s true that they are effective to wash clothes The work results offer no doubt the laundry balls do clean yes but the same or even less than water a b c d e f Ecobola como lavar con agua Compra Maestra in Spanish 340 OCU Organizacion de Consumidores y Usuarios September 2009 archived from the original on 2010 12 22 retrieved 2011 01 03 translation In conclusion the results of the Ecobola are far from those obtained with detergent We can well attribute its washing efficacy to the mechanical action of the washing machine and the temperature of the washing water with which using this product is practically the same as washing only with water The advice of the OCU if you want to spend less money and reduce residues choose one of the detergents recommended in our last analysis and experiment until finding the minimal doses that gives you good results See for example Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitutes Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlements with FTC and Eleven States and Dallas Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitute Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlement with FTC and Six States Federal Trade Commission a b c d e f g h i Roahn H Wynar Laundry Balls in Michael Shermer Pat Linse ed The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience ABC CLIO pp 130 131 a b c d e f g h i Cheryl Mendelson 2005 Laundry the home comforts book of caring for clothes and linens illustrated ed Simon and Schuster pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 7432 7145 5 a b More on green washing grownupgreen 2006 11 17 Archived from the original on 2007 06 23 Retrieved 2010 07 09 a b EcoBalls Are they for real Ramblings of a Geek Jeremy Johnstone 2008 05 11 Archived from the original on 2016 10 28 Retrieved 2010 07 09 a b c d e f g Stephen Lower Magnetic water treatment pseudoscience Chem1 com Retrieved 2011 01 03 a b c FTC Consumer Alert 1 April 1999 Wash Daze Laundry Gadgets Won t Lighten the Load archived from the original on 14 April 2013 retrieved 7 December 2011 Stephen Lower Magnetized water pseudoscientific snake oil Chem1 com retrieved 2011 12 19 AP 1997 05 11 Miracle Clothes Washing Device Investigated The Columbian archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitutes Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlements with FTC and Eleven States Federal Trade Commission April 22 1999 Archived from the original on June 6 2010 Retrieved July 21 2011 Sources Erwin Richard Annau Stipulated Final Judgment Ftc gov 1999 04 22 Retrieved 2010 07 09 Circuit court of Oregon Marion county 12 September 1997 Case 97C14017 Assurance of voluntary compliance Oregon Department of Justice archived from the original on 17 December 2005 See for example Dallas Marketers of Laundry Detergent Substitute Charged with Making False and Unsubstantiated Claims Agree to Settlement with FTC and Six States Federal Trade Commission July 1 1999 Archived from the original on November 3 2011 Retrieved July 21 2011 a b More Dirt on Laundry Gadgets Brief Article Good Housekeeping 2000 01 01 archived from the original on 2014 06 11 registration required AP 1999 03 22 Laundry Balls Outlawed Skeptic archived from the original on 2014 06 11 require registration AP 1999 04 25 Government Says Laundry Ball Businesses Deceptive The Columbian archived from the original on 2014 06 11 registration required Biowashball senza detersivo e si vede Altroconsumo Altroconsumo it Archived from the original on 2013 05 27 Retrieved 2013 03 30 Cleaning Power of Washing Balls No Better Than Plain Water Choice 421 November 15 2011 Hong Kong Consumer Council 2011 11 15 Archived from the original on 2011 11 28 Retrieved 2016 08 23 DECO exige retirada do mercado das ecobolas Diario de Noticias Shonkys 2015 Nanosmart Cleaning Balls Choice Australia 2015 10 07 Archived from the original on 2015 10 14 Retrieved 2015 10 07 External links editDo laundry balls really work July 25 1997 The Straight Dope The ABI Laundry Ball and The Laundry Solution and The Laundry Clean Disk amp about twenty others just like them an entry in The Skeptic s Dictionary Laundry Discs Aired on Market Place November 17 1998 CBC News Marketplace program on scams section Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laundry ball amp oldid 1183963172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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