Clean It Up
UK General Cleaning Forum => General Cleaning Forum => Topic started by: offclean on September 24, 2004, 07:39:20 pm
-
Can anyone help?
We recently tried to clean two Quarry Tiled toilet floors by stripping off what looked like old floor polish.
After stripping, removing slurry etc. and allowing floor to dry, the stripper hadn't touched the polish (which we suspected because it hadn't gone white and treacherously slippy as is usual when it was wet).
We subsequently tried neat acid, sulphamic toilet cleaner, hydrochloric toilet cleaner, bleach, chewing gum remover, cellulose thinners and nail polish remover, none of which budged it.
Has anybody had a similar problem and if so did they find a remedy?
Does anybody know what this may be on the floor and if there's a product specifically designed to remove it?
Chrs me dears.
-
depending on the tiles, there is a process where they are acid cleaned and then neutralised after the clean, but this is costly and a messy job.
regards
martin
-
after trying many acids, strippers etc. i found that cream cleaner is the only thing to bring up quarry tiles. use lots of water and lots of cream cleaner, a black pad and a wet pick up. mop with clean water after.
-
You need to be more specific, what has the floor been sealed with or has the tiles been factory glazed/finished?
regards Dave ADL
-
try morta cleaner
ernesto
-
If it's floor polish should'nt you be using an alkaline stripper, ph 10 to 13.
Acid is not used for stripping floors :o
John
-
Try Johnsons stripper with a polyprop brush on your rotary
-
sounds to me it could be some kind of industrial sealant, You know the acid resistant non slip type i have seen this before on floors but i still dont know what it is. try ringing a manfacturer.
whoever gets the answer first wins a weekend stripping floors.
-
If all else fails, a flamethrower!
If I win can I nominate some one (Nick)
Len
-
Are you looking for a slap Len ???
Bring it on
Nick "Firestarter" Holman
-
Hi
It is probably a solvent based stripper which I think is called Lithofin. In my local area this product is only available in the local tile shop along with the polish made by the same company.
If it is this type of polish you WILL need this stripper and as far as IMO the only product that will work
Cheers
-
Oddly enough nobody has mentioned Polyurethane varnish which was quite commonly used on old quarry tile floors (low tech finish on matt tiles years ago although not a cheap option).
Usually laid thin to soak in it was as tough as old boots and would have withstood most things, although finally going patchy with wear but easy to re-coat. However some of the chemicals mentioned should of at least effected the surface dependant on strength used.
Just another idea :)