This is an advertisementInterested In Advertising? | Contact Us Here
okay so i finally plucked up the courage and phoned the custy.she was actually okay with it i took kev@cleanerbrights advice really in the end and said"hi hello i was unable to remove the paint from your patio window because its to old and to long ingrained and ive also scratched the glass. i didnt want to say that its scratched due to my inexperince and i shouldnt have used blades on toughened/tempered glass and i said i would do the next clean for free and try and remove the scratched. and she said "okay thankyou" RESULT HEY so my plan is to toothpaste the scratch and use cellulose thinners to get the paint off the frame and glass then tell her ive got some better chemicals and done the paint removal in the end and hopefully i will gt the scratch out too! and she should be overjoyedi know its a bit dishonest and i do feel bad, but i cant really afford to replace the glass without skinting myself and its a lesson learned and the patio door is very old too what do you guys recon then?george
i think from now on im not gonna blade anything other than normal (float) glass,if i see a mark in the corner that says anything other than the brand im gonna use thinners to remove paint and not touch it with a blade?!?what do you lot recon?
Quote from: GB Window cleaning on October 24, 2011, 10:06:13 pmi think from now on im not gonna blade anything other than normal (float) glass,if i see a mark in the corner that says anything other than the brand im gonna use thinners to remove paint and not touch it with a blade?!?what do you lot recon?Toughened has the same surface as float, only difference is the process it has gone through to make it toughened. So if your going to scratch toughened glass with your scraper, you will do the same with float glass. Obviously you do not want to use a blade on externally coated glass like self cleaning ect. Also, you will only get very very light surface scratches out by polishing with Toothpaste or T Cut. Ive used Brasso for light scrathes before , but if you can get a fingernail in the scratch, you will have to use something like Cerium Oxide with a buffing wheel. But, depending on how deep they are they can take anything from 45 mins upwards to polish out, and you would really need to know what you are doing, or practise on some old glass before doing it for a customer. Sometimes it can be more cost effective to replace the sealed unit than mess about with polishing if its really bad.
ALL glass doors by law should be toughened glass.Even normal glass will scratch easily at times though, fabricating debris etc mean you can never guarantee that you won't damage so always get a waiver signed.