Cleaning Race Suits

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Discussion

London GT3

Original Poster:

1,025 posts

241 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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I want to have my OMP Race Suit cleaned professionally as it is the end of the season. I know they're not supposed to be washed too much. The label suggests dry cleaning. Is this generally felt to be the best way forward? Any other thoughts?

Thanks.

Weslake-Monza

461 posts

183 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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I'd have thought the end of every meeting rather than the end of the season! Still, better cleaned once a year than not at all. Whatever the washing instructions label says will be ok. Dry cleaning is likely to do a better job than a household machine, and Johnsons will charge something like £11 and call it a jump suit.

Cyder

7,053 posts

220 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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I normally get mine dry cleaned but occasionally put it through the washing machine and it seems to be ok.

Altrezia

8,517 posts

211 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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My OMP one says cool wash and no tumble drying - chuck it in the machine at 30 and air-dry. Easy smile

roddo

569 posts

195 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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As above, was on a cool setting and air dry

spyderman8

1,748 posts

156 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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Sparco's FAQ is here http://www.sparcousa.com/faq

BertBert

19,039 posts

211 months

Monday 27th October 2014
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Well that's utter rubbish. I think that the people who make Nomex/Aramid might know a thing or two about washing it.

Cold washes are not going to do the trick. Dry cleaning may well get out any inflammable contaminants.

My race suit stinks after use as I sweat a lot. So every time after the race weekend it goes in the wash on a normal wash.

Bert

BertBert

19,039 posts

211 months

carl_w

9,180 posts

258 months

Monday 27th October 2014
quotequote all
Nomex is pretty good at withstanding heat, so I don't understand the "don't tumble dry" mentality. I wash mine at 40 deg C with the extra water option, and then stick it in the tumble dryer at full heat. Once or twice a year I spray on Molecule Protector and air dry it. Seems to work a bit like Scotchguard which means the stains don't sink into the fabric.

gaxor

331 posts

253 months

Tuesday 28th October 2014
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carl_w said:
Nomex is pretty good at withstanding heat, so I don't understand the "don't tumble dry" mentality. I wash mine at 40 deg C with the extra water option, and then stick it in the tumble dryer at full heat. Once or twice a year I spray on Molecule Protector and air dry it. Seems to work a bit like Scotchguard which means the stains don't sink into the fabric.
+1

I think the don't wash/tumble dry thing comes from the old cotton treated suits. Nomex itself is inherently fireproof, and not a coated material

TobyLaRohne

5,713 posts

206 months

Tuesday 28th October 2014
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Being based in the desert and racing in 40+ celcius air temps (plus engine temps in the cabin) I do sweat alot, after every race mine gets a soak to leech out the sweat then a wash on cold with some powder, always comes up clean and nice smelling biggrin

MaxRacewear

40 posts

206 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
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What you forget is the particular nature of the garments we wear.

Heat transfer is one of the most arduous of the FIA tests. Flames retardancy is easy. The DuPont leaflet refers to single layer garments which protect from flashover flame, our multi-layer garments also protect from heat transfer.

Much of the heat protection in the suits is from the air pockets trapped within the layers of material, plus within the fluffing of the fibres themselves. Harsh washing and tumble drying is a potential cause of flattening the fibres and hence reducing the thermal protection properties. They won't affect the flame retardancy.

Therefore you should avoid harsh mechanical handling (such as tumble drying) to avoid the suits being damaged by the process right down at fibre level. I would always wash at low temperatures and hang up to dry by the shoulders and ankles. Let them air dry rather than be thrown violently around in a tumble dryer and the air pockets will remain intact.

Also always wash with a detergent powder not soap-based as that risks leaving chalky deposits on the fabric which can sustain flame.

We used to manufacture our own suits with FIA homologation, it's a fascinating subject for a nerd like me!

graemel

7,031 posts

217 months

Saturday 8th November 2014
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MaxRacewear said:
What you forget is the particular nature of the garments we wear.

Heat transfer is one of the most arduous of the FIA tests. Flames retardancy is easy. The DuPont leaflet refers to single layer garments which protect from flashover flame, our multi-layer garments also protect from heat transfer.

Much of the heat protection in the suits is from the air pockets trapped within the layers of material, plus within the fluffing of the fibres themselves. Harsh washing and tumble drying is a potential cause of flattening the fibres and hence reducing the thermal protection properties. They won't affect the flame retardancy.

Therefore you should avoid harsh mechanical handling (such as tumble drying) to avoid the suits being damaged by the process right down at fibre level. I would always wash at low temperatures and hang up to dry by the shoulders and ankles. Let them air dry rather than be thrown violently around in a tumble dryer and the air pockets will remain intact.

Also always wash with a detergent powder not soap-based as that risks leaving chalky deposits on the fabric which can sustain flame.

We used to manufacture our own suits with FIA homologation, it's a fascinating subject for a nerd like me!
With this in mind. Surely the washing machine spin dry could effect the fibres.
Is dry cleaning the safest way to go

Dr JonboyG

2,561 posts

239 months

Saturday 8th November 2014
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Altrezia said:
My OMP one says cool wash and no tumble drying - chuck it in the machine at 30 and air-dry. Easy smile
Sparco too. You can buy special detergents like Molecule but you don't really need to.

Dr JonboyG

2,561 posts

239 months

Saturday 8th November 2014
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carl_w said:
Nomex is pretty good at withstanding heat, so I don't understand the "don't tumble dry" mentality. I wash mine at 40 deg C with the extra water option, and then stick it in the tumble dryer at full heat. Once or twice a year I spray on Molecule Protector and air dry it. Seems to work a bit like Scotchguard which means the stains don't sink into the fabric.
Might be more to do with increased wear from being bounced around in a tumble dryer.

Dr JonboyG

2,561 posts

239 months

Saturday 8th November 2014
quotequote all
Dr JonboyG said:
Might be more to do with increased wear from being bounced around in a tumble dryer.
graemel said:
With this in mind. Surely the washing machine spin dry could effect the fibres.
Is dry cleaning the safest way to go
Dry cleaners aren't going to hand wash your race suit in a bucket of the finest organic solvents, they're going to stick it in an industrial-sized washing machine that uses those organic solvents. Most household washing machines should have a delicates or wool setting, which is completely fine to use with nomex.