Advice on Glass Cleaning Products Needed
-
Moglet
- Posts: 3485
- Joined: Mon 25 Jun, 2007 5:43 pm
- Location: The Shire
- Organisation: An Urban Myth
- Interests: I'll let you know if I get my life back.
- Contact:
Advice on Glass Cleaning Products Needed
I sustained a nasty shoulder and back injury last year, and ever since I have found it very hard going to clean glass.
I would welcome suggestions from forum members regarding products that you use to make glass cleaning easier. Any slight improvement would be a godsend.
Thanks!
I would welcome suggestions from forum members regarding products that you use to make glass cleaning easier. Any slight improvement would be a godsend.
Thanks!
........Áine JGF SGF FTB
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.-
Grahame Case
- realhotglass
- Posts: 172
- Joined: Sat 09 Apr, 2005 9:10 am
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
- Organisation: Tudor Glass - Kiln formed glass
- Interests: Bushwalking, skiing, 4WDing, photography, PDR (Paintless Dent Removal)
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
- Contact:
In addition to the above suggestions . . .
For my general glass cleaning, I use a regular 5lt size glass cleaner decanted into a hand pump spray bottle.
This has a small trace of ammonia in it, which technically should evaporate.
However, I usually then heat this glass up to 750c !!
You are dealing with peoples art etc, so maybe strong chemicals should be avoided altogether?
A mix of Methylated Spirits / distilled water is popular here with many framers, and it evaporates totally. About 50/50 or maybe higher mets %.
For speciality glasses (coated) you need an ammonia free cleaner.
Methylated spirits is fine for these, or we supply and use this here when dealing with making UV samples etc . . .

Packaged up by GHS, a supplier here in Oz.
I am tempted to convert completely to the aerosol for all our needs in the shop, because just a small light spray in the middle of the glass, wipe with good cotton rag, and it cleans easily, dries so much faster and is totally streak free.
(With speciality coated glass you always spray your cloth lightly, not the glass.)
Excellent for mirrors too, and you can retail it in your shop.
I'm sure you would find a similar product there from a supplier.
For my general glass cleaning, I use a regular 5lt size glass cleaner decanted into a hand pump spray bottle.
This has a small trace of ammonia in it, which technically should evaporate.
However, I usually then heat this glass up to 750c !!
You are dealing with peoples art etc, so maybe strong chemicals should be avoided altogether?
A mix of Methylated Spirits / distilled water is popular here with many framers, and it evaporates totally. About 50/50 or maybe higher mets %.
For speciality glasses (coated) you need an ammonia free cleaner.
Methylated spirits is fine for these, or we supply and use this here when dealing with making UV samples etc . . .

Packaged up by GHS, a supplier here in Oz.
I am tempted to convert completely to the aerosol for all our needs in the shop, because just a small light spray in the middle of the glass, wipe with good cotton rag, and it cleans easily, dries so much faster and is totally streak free.
(With speciality coated glass you always spray your cloth lightly, not the glass.)
Excellent for mirrors too, and you can retail it in your shop.
I'm sure you would find a similar product there from a supplier.
Regards,
Les
............Oooo
oooO.....(....)
(....)........)../
.\..(........(_/
..\_)
"Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time."
Les
............Oooo
oooO.....(....)
(....)........)../
.\..(........(_/
..\_)
"Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time."
-
Roboframer
-
Roboframer
-
Dermot
Contact Ebor and ask them where you can get their aersol glass cleaner 17-10 in Ireland it is the best that I ever used...........they have or had a sales operation in Ireland a few years ago I'm not sure that it is still around..........
Lion have No: 548 glass cleaner also......I would guess that this is made by Ebor for them........
Lion have No: 548 glass cleaner also......I would guess that this is made by Ebor for them........
-
Dermot
Ebor catalogue page http://www.ebor.co.uk/catalogue/17.pdfDermot wrote:Contact Ebor and ask them where you can get their aersol glass cleaner 17-10 in Ireland it is the best that I ever used...........they have or had a sales operation in Ireland a few years ago I'm not sure that it is still around..........
Lion have No: 548 glass cleaner also......I would guess that this is made by Ebor for them........
-
Dermot
From the Grumble a few years ago..... http://www.thegrumble.com/showthread.ph ... glass+ebor
-
markw
Best thing I can recommend is the use of microfiber clothes. They come in a number of varieties and cost. Avoid the peach skin type - to much drag for glass cleaning - next step up when they have a fairly fine texture seems to give the best results. I buy mine from Halfords for about £2 each - expensive but worth every penny. get a few and wash regularly, they last for ages. They are so good that you can get a good finish just using plain old tap water - but I tend to use Glass & Mirrors glass cleaner - very sparingly.
-
Moglet
- Posts: 3485
- Joined: Mon 25 Jun, 2007 5:43 pm
- Location: The Shire
- Organisation: An Urban Myth
- Interests: I'll let you know if I get my life back.
- Contact:
I must 'fess up to using 'Mr Muscle' myself, John!Merlin Framers wrote:Believe it or not we use Tesco non smear glass cleaner ...
Thankyou all for the info and supplier leads. As I've said in another thread, the glass I get really does require a lot of cleaning. Before the injury, I was able to supply judicious amounts of elbow grease to overcome this, but since then, there are occasions where it can take me me three or four attempts to get the glass completely clean, especially for larger frames.
The orbital sander idea definitely caught my fancy, 'Robo' John! I was surprised to learn that 0000 steel wool can be used on glass!
Les, thanks for the extra tips on cleaning speciality glass!
Thankyou, Dermot, for the link to the Grumble: it's a great help to be pointed at exactly the right thread!
........Áine JGF SGF FTB
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.-
absolute framing
- Posts: 279
- Joined: Mon 03 Oct, 2005 11:19 pm
- Location: Dublin, Ireland
- Organisation: Absolute Framing
- Interests: Reading the Lion Catalogue
- Contact:
-
Moglet
- Posts: 3485
- Joined: Mon 25 Jun, 2007 5:43 pm
- Location: The Shire
- Organisation: An Urban Myth
- Interests: I'll let you know if I get my life back.
- Contact:
- realhotglass
- Posts: 172
- Joined: Sat 09 Apr, 2005 9:10 am
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
- Organisation: Tudor Glass - Kiln formed glass
- Interests: Bushwalking, skiing, 4WDing, photography, PDR (Paintless Dent Removal)
- Location: Adelaide, South Australia
- Contact:
You copy (Ctrl C) / paste (Ctrl V) it from one of Áines' posts Stephen !! : )absolute framing wrote:Hi Aine (sorry, dont know how to put the fada aver the ''A'' )Stephen
Regards,
Les
............Oooo
oooO.....(....)
(....)........)../
.\..(........(_/
..\_)
"Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time."
Les
............Oooo
oooO.....(....)
(....)........)../
.\..(........(_/
..\_)
"Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time."
- John
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1896
- Joined: Sun 27 Apr, 2003 8:00 pm
- Location: Ireland
- Organisation: Tech Support
- Interests: Forums and stuff
- Location: Belfast
- Contact:
Or, on a PC, hold down 'Alt Gr' and then 'a' (without the quotes), use the Shift Key at the same time, or 'Caps Lock', for upper case.realhotglass wrote: You copy (Ctrl C) / paste (Ctrl V) it from one of Áines' posts Stephen !! : )
HOW Much!?
EstLite Picture Framing Software
EstLite Picture Framing Software
-
osgood
-
absolute framing
- Posts: 279
- Joined: Mon 03 Oct, 2005 11:19 pm
- Location: Dublin, Ireland
- Organisation: Absolute Framing
- Interests: Reading the Lion Catalogue
- Contact:
-
Spit
- Posts: 1102
- Joined: Fri 17 Mar, 2006 8:54 pm
- Location: Glandwr
- Organisation: Framing Mad
- Interests: Framing, watercolours & CCFC
- Location: Pembrokeshire
- Contact:
-
Moglet
- Posts: 3485
- Joined: Mon 25 Jun, 2007 5:43 pm
- Location: The Shire
- Organisation: An Urban Myth
- Interests: I'll let you know if I get my life back.
- Contact:
Alt-Gr plus vowel: how cool is that, John?
To think of all the time I wasted learning the character codes.... That's the trouble with some engineering types: why make something easy, when, with a little effort, one can make it nigh on impossible!
John, I think we need a Cetlic Culture Corner. Completely off-topic again!
'Fada' (rough pronunciation 'fodda') is the Irish for 'long.' The accent is used to indicate long vowel sounds. BTW, over here we call it "edumacation," Ormond!
John, I think we need a Cetlic Culture Corner. Completely off-topic again!
'Fada' (rough pronunciation 'fodda') is the Irish for 'long.' The accent is used to indicate long vowel sounds. BTW, over here we call it "edumacation," Ormond!
........Áine JGF SGF FTB
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.
.Briseann an dúchas trí shuiligh an chuit.-
Moglet
- Posts: 3485
- Joined: Mon 25 Jun, 2007 5:43 pm
- Location: The Shire
- Organisation: An Urban Myth
- Interests: I'll let you know if I get my life back.
- Contact:
