To be fair if you look at it before it was fully cleaned that side does already kind of look a bit Less burnt. But at the same time it dose look like it didnt do anything special lol
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
i personally never would use a scrub daddy because i need hot water to scrub away food and scrub daddy has no scrubbing power under hot water and it will fall apart and become less firm over time they have good marketing but every other cleaning utensil is better
@@Raven-girlexactly u can make it cleaner with the scrub daddy if u did it just for a bit more and just look at how the normal one looks and the scrub daddy the normal one looks like it's been used for years
The scrub daddy is a very good sponge. Much better than a regular one. but in this particular test I don't think she used the sponge correctly. if you use cold water on the songe it scrubs much better. warm water makes it more spongey. i don't think she used the cold water
Oh man, the shills have entered the comments section lmfao. No, the Scrub Daddy in fact does not work better than an actual sponge. We can see that here while they are being tested under the same conditions. Man y’all will literally buy anything with a brandname on it. 💀
If you want to know which is better you should compare prices. A pack of 5 normal scrub sponges costs around $1, whereas the ScrubDaddy costs $5. That’s 25 to 1.
@@somerandomnooblol Every two days is such a huge stretch. You can easily get a couple weeks out of a regular sponge, depending on how frequently you hand wash dishes and how crusty those dishes are. There's also sponges/scrubbers made specifically for more resistant grime, which also cost a fraction of the price of a srub daddy. Combine that with maybe learning how to cook/soak food off of your kitchen wares and you have a clear winner in cost efficiency, that's for sure.
For a job like this, steel wool works best. Also, you can get scrub daddy for $2 a piece at Costco, and Scotch Brite sponges are like 75c to $1 a piece
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
yeah that's what I thought, it looked just like in the beginning, when she said she only has the regular one for this test, even though it was clearly already used and not a new one 🤡🤦🏻♀️ but she had to lie to get paid for the sponsored ad 😅
No, it doesn't?? Shit would have been obliterated if she used it to clean the whole pan. Plus, those little balls are so annoying. They stick badly to my microfiber cloths.
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
She used the scrub daddy improperly this was a soft side vs rough side comparison scrub daddy is meant to be used with cold water when dealing with heavy duty stuff because that's when it becomes solid and rough otherwise you're just using the soft side of the sponge
@@user-rr8hz2zx7lif you soak it in cold water it makes a big difference I had one of the scrub daddies and it generally worked better with cold water for hard stuff then warm water bc the cold water hardens the sponge up
used more effort on the cheapo 50 cent sponges plus its almost gonna fall apart after this she even used less effort on the scrub daddy to be fair and on top of all that all the 50 cent sponges do is scratch ur fuckin pan
If this is sarcasm, I apologize I'm autistic and can't tell..but she was totally bias, she really wanted the scrubdaddy to win so she made it seem like she scrubbed harder with the regular sponge as if thats why it won
Get the sponge daddy. It's better than the regular scrub daddy. Has the foam on one side and the scrubber on the other. 4 for like $5 and they last forever
No since i got scrub daddy it has lasted at least 3 times more than what a regular sponge does and you can get it rlly hard if you put cold water on it for scrubing
@@rgvttoexcept im in hot ass weather and water doesnt GET cold for me unless its in the fridge, so im gonma have a soft ass scrub daddy all season. My scotchbrite sponge isnt getting soft because of the warm tap water, neither is my steel wool. Some products just dont work for everyone
@@tambrabonds950 fair, hot weather aint an excuse though. soak it in the coldest water you can get and chuck it in the freezer for 5 minutes. problem solved.
the regular sponge side that you used is a scourer, scrub daddy is a scrubber. They’re used for different uses, I think a more fair comparison might be scour daddy vs the regular sponge
@@JustTuppi Pretty much yeah. But I just use a scrub mommy for the regular stains and a steel scourer for the hard stains, similar to how I used just a regular sponge and a separate steel scourer before. Difference is, scrub mommy lasts for months and doesn’t smell compared to my usual sponges that I used before
Regular sponge won 😭 This just goes to show that not everything that costs more does a better job. I'll be sticking to my cheap dollar store sponges tyvm!
@@thetrashman9547The scrub daddy would be to solid(?) to actually clean the surface without damage, not to mention that things like that are easier to clean off with hot water
@@alexandrasimic7358it's not hard enough to actually damage a pan, and you can just get it soft again to clean it by running hot water under it anyway
The thing I like about the scrub daddy ones is literally how long they last and how easy they are to clean, my mom got me one like a year ago and the same exact one still has zero residue and holds up firmly 😭 normal sponges only last 2-3 days of heavy cleaning before you have to buy a new pack
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
Make sure you use it with COLD WATER FOR TOUGHER STUCK ON FOODS. If you use warm water it goes soft and doesn’t work as well.. you use it that way for non stick pans ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Main perk of sponge daddy is that temperature changes the hardness so you can have either a flexible hot sponge or a firm cold sponge. It’s a general purpose sponge that will get beat by specialized things like scotch bright pads or steel wool
The regular sponge side was so much better that i cannot comprehend why you posted this. The scrub daddy is not more durable, it falls apart within the first few uses just like the other one.
In her defense, in the beginning the regular sponge side wasnt as badly burned. You can see a big bare spot on the top right side, so there was less to clean but oh well. I still dont own a scrub daddy LOL
In terms of longevity for a bigger project I’d use a scrub daddy, but for a $1.25 6 pack of those cheap sponges(0.30/sponge) that last me about 2-3 weeks per sponge just on dishes(I’ve heard that scrub daddy lasts about 2 weeks) it’s a whole load cheaper. 0.30 sponge for dishes, 4.00 sponge for home cleaning.
Whoever told you scrub daddy lasts 2 weeks must be competing in the Olympic dish washing competition cause idk how else you’d burn through that much sponge
@@mllrd well washing well over 50 dishes a day from personal experience, it only lasted me about 2 weeks before it got disgusting beyond ability to clean with or started tearing and leaving weird yellow specks on the dishes
Perhaps the part with a normal sponge was looking better due to it being soaked in water for longer than the scrub Dady side or it was not as badly burnt.
Imagine simping for a brand so hard you're here making excuses for poor performance 💀 like it couldn't pooooosssssssibly be that the scrub daddy is simply not that great of a product.
@@isabelbladon2883i mean whats funner, watching some shit happen and believing it even if its crazy, or trying to find excuses for why the shit wasnt that crazy?
For those that want an explanation: The difference here is that the "normal" sponge has the green bottom that's made of a really hard abrasive material. Think of it like something similar to steel wool. It's great at getting rid of heavy build up on tough materials like pots but also damages a lot of different surfaces. The Scrub Daddy is a tough non-abrasive scrubber which means you can use it on almost every surface without leaving marks. For a more level playing field, this should be tested with a non-abrasive sponge. Usually they're blue and labeled as non-abrasive sponges. Happy cleaning! 🧼
She is the ultimate “i fall for every marketing trick in the universe”. Like scrub dady and “The pink stuff” are possibly the two biggest marketing scams in the kitchen cleaning niche
She’s not using it right!!! You have to use cold water to keep the sponge hard. Hot water makes it soft for things like nonstick pans. For this she should have used cold water
For carbon buildup on a stainless pan, you'd want steel wool. Those green scour pads are designed to be steel wool substitutes. Scrub Daddy is basically a plastic polymer and lacks the hardness to remove carbon buildup from steel. The tool wasn't designed for that, whereas the green pad was. You basically tried to use a claw hammer to break down a wall when a sledgehammer would have been much better. Scrub Daddy also makes its own scour pad which in my experience is more durable than the green pads. If you're a scrub daddy fan, use it when you clean metal dishes.
@@isaiahshackleford6523then it goes hard, but it didn't look like she did because it was still soft and squishy where as when in cold it's super hard and can hold up to weights, unfair test tbh
NOPE. LEMIE Shine and Baking soda. No elbow grease and it will clean the whole hing like new. Put equal portions and add a little water let it sit 5 min and it’s like scrubbing bubbles eating it all off.
The reg sponge won because it’s okay to use something very abrasive for this clean, scrub daddies are non scratch so obviously they’re not gonna do as good at a scour but that’s okay! Different products have different uses!
@@Copeandseethe822idk, mine scrubs great. Did you feed your scrub daddy? If you dont give it enough milk and blood to drink it won't be as good as it should be.
its arbitrary what "requires" scratch most of the scratch is comming from the cleaning sollution she puts on it since thats filled with silica and other srubbing fillers the same way you brush your teeth with toothpaste thats filled with silica and use a soft bristle. if you actualy want it to scratch a ton of material like gunk from the bottom of the pan why not use sand? but if you are going to compare 2 cleaning tools where 1 is standard wityh 2 sides and the other is an "advanced" one that costs more, boasts about its hard to soft transformation i expect a better result and not have the more productive and standard one be underrepresented XD @@AXLGREASE
Valid. But never use steel wool to scrub non-stick (Teflon) coated pans. It might remove the Teflon and it will go into your food. Teflon is carcinogenic.
Ya know despite the shedding, regular sponges work great, they're all I've used and even while soft and flimsy, they still work great! (that or I'm just one hell of a dishwasher)
Ah, same. I honestly dislike the scrub daddies, they're rather overhyped for how effective they are when compared to a regular sponge The scour daddies are amazing for burnt food/pans though
Not an expert or anything but I think the reason why the regular sponge won this is because it's softer than the Scrub Daddy. Softer = can get through the small creases the pan had. Scrub Daddy is good for removing foods that are stuck on plates or pans. I love using it for our rice cooker 😭
I've used a scrub daddy for about 2 years now and it's amazing. For general cleaning and dishwashing the scrub daddy holds up a lot better. When it comes to scraping the cheap sponges are better
@@fuyukazemi yep scrub daddy is super useful because it lasts longer and does a decent job and is super easy to clean. but it in no way does anywhere near as good a job as a normal scrub sponge, so I switch to that whenever there's something tougher to scrub off.
@@Nate6603there’s actually a pretty big difference. Scotch brite uses metal oxides and thus more abrasive and isn’t even a sponge. More of an abrasive pad and thus why it worked better. I use it to get a really smooth finish on metals after sanding.
Honestly, you should of tried a scrub mommy with this test. It’s got a scrubber side and the other side is the normal scrub daddy sponge. I bet the Scrub Mommy would’ve gotten everything off. Scrub Mommy works amazing with cleaning dishes and pots!!!
I was thinking the same too lmao, I’m not hating on scrub daddy, but there’s being bias and then literal evidence as to which one did better, like, unless she should’ve used cold water so the scrub daddy was firm? But like, this was really biased when she should’ve just admitted the regular sponge generally did better and been like “I’m not sure if I did anything right or wrong, but the regular sponge managed to better” since then she wouldn’t sound nearly as one sided.
The green side of that sponge is called a scouring pad. It's naturally rougher than the scrub daddy, so that's why it cleaned the bottom of the pan better. PS: A regular SPONGE would not have fared well on this cleanup at all... hope this helps you all.
wasn't a good comparison it was basically soft side of a sponge vs rough side the scrub daddy was either run under hot or warm water or an offbrand product for this application it needed to be run under cold water so it would be solid and rough
@barbarianbijuu Are you like stupid? How is that not fair? They were tested under the same conditions. Also, using cold water makes it harder to clean grease like this off. So even if scrub daddy becomes more abrasive, the cold water will make it harder for it to work.
@@liyafarrcrahs7014you realize that dishes are washed with hot water? The sponge was also run under hot water, and it’s an accurate depiction of washing dishes, since dishes are washed under hot water. The test environment was pretty true to life.