Blood comes right out with both Ariel and Persil
I've never found any need to pre-treat anything. Stuff comes out clean, that particular 'sweat stain' is rather tough though as it's been caused by a reaction between antiperspirant and optical brighteners. The only way to remove it is with very long soaks.
I would avoid using antiperspirants that create such stains. It's usually an indication that the formula of the spray/roll on is way too strong. There are plenty of good non-staining antiperspirants out there
I think the best way to think of a modern front loader washing machine is as a Biochemical Reactor.
Your clothes are basically gently saturated with a concentrated solution of water and highly complex cleaning agents. Actually calling it a detergent is not giving it it's correct definition, it's far from simply detergent.
30°C to 40°C is the ideal temperature to activate the enzymes and the best machines will be designed to do a profile heat warming the water up gently to maximise the cleaning agents' effectiveness.
Normally you shouldn't have any problem shifting stains, but if you do, just increase the soak and wash time. Longer cool/warm washes don't really use that much power as it's only the motor that's running and it's quite a small amount of water to keep warm. Doing a full boil wash is pretty wasteful of energy.
For normally dirty items, i.e. just sweat and minor staining, a very short wash with a TOL detergent + a good rinse cycle should be more than sufficient and much better for your clothes.
Also, using a good liquid fabric conditioner, like Comfort, keeps clothes in much better shape for longer by protecting the fibres. In much the same way as using a good conditioner on your hair will keep it in good shape.
Boil washing really should only be used for sanitisation of laundry such as bed linen and towels and only where absolutely necessary.
The only thing I would say is that if you're almost always washing at 30C, it's worth running a hot wash once in a while just to make sure the machine gets a chance to flush out any residues of detergent and conditioner and kills off any bacteria growth which can cause your machine to smell bad.
Although, that being said, I have never really noticed any issue with smells from our machine and we rarely if ever do very hot washes.
I've never found any need to pre-treat anything. Stuff comes out clean, that particular 'sweat stain' is rather tough though as it's been caused by a reaction between antiperspirant and optical brighteners. The only way to remove it is with very long soaks.
I would avoid using antiperspirants that create such stains. It's usually an indication that the formula of the spray/roll on is way too strong. There are plenty of good non-staining antiperspirants out there
I think the best way to think of a modern front loader washing machine is as a Biochemical Reactor.
Your clothes are basically gently saturated with a concentrated solution of water and highly complex cleaning agents. Actually calling it a detergent is not giving it it's correct definition, it's far from simply detergent.
30°C to 40°C is the ideal temperature to activate the enzymes and the best machines will be designed to do a profile heat warming the water up gently to maximise the cleaning agents' effectiveness.
Normally you shouldn't have any problem shifting stains, but if you do, just increase the soak and wash time. Longer cool/warm washes don't really use that much power as it's only the motor that's running and it's quite a small amount of water to keep warm. Doing a full boil wash is pretty wasteful of energy.
For normally dirty items, i.e. just sweat and minor staining, a very short wash with a TOL detergent + a good rinse cycle should be more than sufficient and much better for your clothes.
Also, using a good liquid fabric conditioner, like Comfort, keeps clothes in much better shape for longer by protecting the fibres. In much the same way as using a good conditioner on your hair will keep it in good shape.
Boil washing really should only be used for sanitisation of laundry such as bed linen and towels and only where absolutely necessary.
The only thing I would say is that if you're almost always washing at 30C, it's worth running a hot wash once in a while just to make sure the machine gets a chance to flush out any residues of detergent and conditioner and kills off any bacteria growth which can cause your machine to smell bad.
Although, that being said, I have never really noticed any issue with smells from our machine and we rarely if ever do very hot washes.