Clean It Up
UK Window Cleaning Forum => Window Cleaning Forum => Topic started by: Timmy Boy on November 18, 2021, 04:08:03 pm
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Hi
I have been asked by a potential customer to clean their windows on a converted church. The main atrium is glass but the other windows are perspex. He said that he had someone in who put a product on the perspex which brightened and made the perspex slightly clearer (he called it a moisturiser!). He said that it did improve the look and the clarity and wanted to know if we could provide a clean on a quarterly basis.
Has anyone had experience of such a product? If so is it easy to use?
Many thanks
Tim
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Hi
I have been asked by a potential customer to clean their windows on a converted church. The main atrium is glass but the other windows are perspex. He said that he had someone in who put a product on the perspex which brightened and made the perspex slightly clearer (he called it a moisturiser!). He said that it did improve the look and the clarity and wanted to know if we could provide a clean on a quarterly basis.
Has anyone had experience of such a product? If so is it easy to use?
Many thanks
Tim
Sounds dodgy to me, how would that even work?
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I know right. I am going to take a look at it next week but apparently they were charged about £500 for this service! I looked at a few different perspex cleaners but they are for more for localised scratches
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Cleaning Perspex with wfp will cause scratches and when the sun is low in the sky it looks awfully, we won’t clean any clear Perspex because of this
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My guess is he was using vision or similar, then blagging that it was some kind of miracle product.
If you get the job, best to use a flocked brush on Perspex.
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Some jobs you quote for, some jobs you don't. This is one of those jobs I would walk away from. The job will never look the same as that other cleaner did, so you will be chasing your tail.
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Walk away.....you ll scratch the perspex even with a flocked brush...