Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast
Results 31 to 40 of 59

Thread: Glass Polishing... deep cleaning

          
  1. #31
    Registered Member CELL's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    116
    Rep Power
    9
    Oh ok...I didnt realize you were answering the question about scratch-x directly in that reply. I was looking for a quoted answer, or atleast an answer citing the name of the product in question.
    Also, I wanted to say with impressed enthusiasm that the previous steps used to clean a a bathrooms shower door with 8 years of hard water build up is amazing. Seriously.
    I wanted to see what youre talking about with "water spots" on a windshield, so I walked outside and found one on my windshield....I wasnt able to test anything because well...I wiped it off with my finger.
    Who would of thought...
    I'm not sure what exactly a shower door in a bathroom under low light conditions has to do with a cars windshield in real life scenarios, in natural light...?
    I believe my idea of what #4 does is a bit skewed. I was under the impression that it was a polish. My sincerest apologies if I was wrong. So...that being said, it made sense that you wouldnt want to slap a layer of polish onto glass. Wouldnt you agree?
    Sure, itll clean surface contaminants, but it will also leave a reflective layer that might be distracting to a driver.
    Oh and thanks for the link to a spell checker. Im not sure where I mispelled something, but id be happy to made aware of it.
    I didnt know we were being judged by spelling here anyways.
    ....People still use IE?

  2. #32
    Registered Member Mike Phillips's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Stuart, Florida
    Age
    52
    Posts
    24,964
    Rep Power
    514
    Sometimes everything makes more sense when you've actually used a product to accomplish a goal, especially after the normal methods or products have not worked.

    I lived in Oregon for most of my life and because of the amount of rain the Northwest gets, water spots on glass, (and on paint), were a real issue.

    Spray on glass cleaners don't work to remove films that have built-up over time.

    Something with some bite to it, in a way that won't scratch glass does.

    This is where Meguiar's diminishing abrasives come into play. They cut or clean off the offending film without scratching the glass in a way that a spray-on glass cleaner cannot remove.

    I've written all the information in this thread not from conjecture, but from years of hands-on experience.


    As far as spelling goes, I use both Firefox and IE and IE Spell doesn't work in Firefox, also Firefox provides only a little window to type in on forums and I like the bigger message box in IE.

    Whenever I reply to the forum I always spell check my text, if I quote someone, it will also spell-check their text. When I spell checked my replies to you with your quoted text, it picked up a lot of miss-spelled words. So while no one is judging you or anyone else on spelling ability, I included the link to assist you, but if you're using something beside IE, then you'll have to find a work-around.


    If you like, I will send you a bottle of M04 to play with, just send me your shipping address.
    Mike Phillips
    Office: 800-869-3011 x206
    Mike.Phillips@Autogeek.net
    "Find something you like and use it often"

  3. #33
    Registered Member CELL's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    116
    Rep Power
    9
    Well, like I said.
    I'll be contacting ADS later today to place an order.
    Ive used glass cleaners for years and have cleaned plenty of windshields.
    The products in my arsenal are currently Stoners Invisible glass and Megs NXT glass cleaner.
    Ive never run into problems with removing film with either of these products.
    2 coats...maybe 3 and things look good to me.
    Now, im not sure if I should order a gallon of the glass concentrate this afternoon or just stick with the 2 products Ive been using and keep a bottle of #4 on hand for ultra tough situations.
    What if theirs a ton of build up inside the car..? Would you recommend using #4 by hand?

  4. #34
    Registered Member Mike Phillips's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Stuart, Florida
    Age
    52
    Posts
    24,964
    Rep Power
    514
    Originally posted by CELL


    I believe my idea of what #4 does is a bit skewed. I was under the impression that it was a polish.

    M04 Heavy Cut Cleaner is a paint cleaner.



    If you were to shake a bottle of it up, and then pour some out into your hand and then feel it between your fingers, you will be able to feel the diminishing abrasives as they are large enough to feel unlike our microscopic diminishing abrasive products.

    It is this larger size that enables these types of diminishing abrasives to cut into the film on a peice of glass and remove it without scratching it.
    Mike Phillips
    Office: 800-869-3011 x206
    Mike.Phillips@Autogeek.net
    "Find something you like and use it often"

  5. #35
    Registered Member CELL's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    116
    Rep Power
    9
    Right On.
    Please be patient as im still trying to learn the product #'s of Megs line. I mustve gotten it confused with something else.
    I was up late last night burning the midnight oil, studying Megs 2006 Pro catalog and perhaps in my weariness, I got some products confused.

  6. #36
    Registered Member Mike Phillips's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Stuart, Florida
    Age
    52
    Posts
    24,964
    Rep Power
    514
    Originally posted by CELL

    What if theirs a ton of build up inside the car..? Would you recommend using #4 by hand?

    No.

    The type of film build-up you get on the inside of a car will wipe off with a spray on cleaner. Plus you have to be careful of tinted windows because a product like #4 would scratch this type of film.

    It is generally, only the outside of glass that when exposed to the outdoors for extended periods of time that will get some kind of build-up on the surface. Sometimes a spray on glass cleaner will remove this, but in severe cases it will not.

    Just like paint gets built-up contaminants that actually bond to the surface and we remove these with clay, glass can also have contaminants build-up on the surface. If you think about it, both the glass and the paint on a car are exposed to the same environment, so if the paint is getting dirty, or having contaminants build-up on it, then it only makes sense that any surface or component on the car could have contaminants build-up on the surface.

    Claying will remove some contaminants off glass, but I doubt claying would have fixed Brian's shower doors. He tired spray on cleaners with aggressive applicator materials and that didn't even work.

    When he used the diminishing abrasives in one of our paint cleaners, it cut right to the problem...
    Mike Phillips
    Office: 800-869-3011 x206
    Mike.Phillips@Autogeek.net
    "Find something you like and use it often"

  7. #37
    Registered Member Mike Phillips's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Stuart, Florida
    Age
    52
    Posts
    24,964
    Rep Power
    514
    Originally posted by CELL
    Right On.
    Please be patient as I'm still trying to learn the product #'s of Megs line. I mustve gotten it confused with something else.
    I was up late last night burning the midnight oil, studying Megs 2006 Pro catalog and perhaps in my weariness, I got some products confused.
    Send me your shipping address and I'll have a bottle of $04 sent to you today.

    mphillips@meguiars.com


    I've really got to leave this thread as I have a top priority project to finish before noon.
    Mike Phillips
    Office: 800-869-3011 x206
    Mike.Phillips@Autogeek.net
    "Find something you like and use it often"

  8. #38
    Registered Member CELL's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    116
    Rep Power
    9
    When you explain it in terms of the outside of the glass being exposed to the same exact elements as the paint, then cleaning it the same way makes perfect sense.

  9. #39
    Registered Member Monk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    339
    Rep Power
    11
    Originally posted by Mike Phillips
    Next time try this by hand with a piece of terry cloth or by machine with a W=7006 foam cutting pad.

    #4 Heavy Cut Cleaner




    It will work so much better than either of the two product you tried because of the type of diminishing abrasive this product uses. Next time you're around a bottle of #4 Heavy Cut Cleaner, shake up the bottle and pour a little into your fingers and then rub your fingers back and forth. You will easily feel the diminishing abrasives, (if you continue to rub your fingers together your will feel the diminishing abrasives breakdown and disappear).

    Now, feel any of the products in the 80's series, such as the #84 Compound Power Cleaner in the same way and it will feel like you're rubbing a soft, smooth hand lotion between your fingers.

    The difference is the 80's series uses microscopic diminishing abrasives while the traditional Mirror Glaze products use for lack of a better term, macroscopic diminishing abrasives.

    It is this larger size diminishing abrasive particle that cuts, or slices through the film that has built up on the surface of your glass and polishes it off.

    Liquid glass cleaners don't offer this polishing effect. When ever I detail a customers car, I'll almost always machine polish their glass with this system so that the glass is a glossy and shiny as the paint. When you do this and you've detailed the car correctly, the finished look jumps out at you! because everything on the car is gleaming.

    In Oregon and Washington, I ran into a lot of people with horrendous water spots on their glass, as such, I have a lot of experience polishing glass.

    Mike
    Well, so, anyway, now that all of that is hopefully over, what would the speed be for the rotary. I bought the 04, an extra W7006 and I have a rotary. I'm ready to fire it up as soon as I hang sheets all over the car and the garage! Tape off the molding, I suppose.

    Should I lay out a bead, work right to left and pick it up at 10 O'Clock?

  10. #40
    Registered Member Mike Phillips's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Stuart, Florida
    Age
    52
    Posts
    24,964
    Rep Power
    514
    Originally posted by Monk
    Well, so, anyway, now that all of that is hopefully over, what would the speed be for the rotary.
    #1300rpm to 1500rpm

    Should I lay out a bead, work right to left and pick it up at 10 O'Clock?
    That's how I would do it.

    When machine cleaning glass, you can't really get into the edges/corners of each window because the sides of the foam pad will make contact with the frame of the window before it gets completely into the glass in the corner, for these areas you can either live with them or do them by hand using a peice of terry cloth towel.
    Mike Phillips
    Office: 800-869-3011 x206
    Mike.Phillips@Autogeek.net
    "Find something you like and use it often"

Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. polishing glass?
    By CarbonBlack in forum Detailing 101
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: Feb 10th, 2008, 03:23 PM
  2. polishing glass
    By Bwiser in forum Detailing 101
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: Jan 25th, 2007, 08:11 AM
  3. Polishing Glass
    By Jbirk in forum Detailing 101
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: Sep 2nd, 2005, 05:14 PM
  4. Glass Polishing... deep cleaning
    By Zitosonic in forum Detailing 101
    Replies: 17
    Last Post: Mar 11th, 2005, 05:01 PM
  5. polishing glass
    By 2000 in forum Detailing 101
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: Apr 9th, 2004, 01:45 PM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •