What brand have you guys seem to find that does the best job getting the cresote off the glass on the doors?
MF1635 Owner said:What brand have you guys seem to find that does the best job getting the cresote off the glass on the doors?
BrowningBAR said:MF1635 Owner said:What brand have you guys seem to find that does the best job getting the cresote off the glass on the doors?
Ash, water, paper towel.
And drier wood.
BrowningBAR said:I'm honestly confused by people using all of these products and razor blades to clean the glass. I've had some really dark and thick creosote on some of the used stoves I've picked up. Water and ash has never failed to clean the mess.
WoodPorn said:I've found Ceramic cooktop cleaner to work wonders...Windex if it is just a light haze
I have to agree. I never had anything on my glass that ashes and warm water didn't remove.BrowningBAR said:I'm honestly confused by people using all of these products and razor blades to clean the glass. I've had some really dark and thick creosote on some of the used stoves I've picked up. Water and ash has never failed to clean the mess.
xclimber said:I have to agree. I never had anything on my glass that ashes and warm water didn't remove.BrowningBAR said:I'm honestly confused by people using all of these products and razor blades to clean the glass. I've had some really dark and thick creosote on some of the used stoves I've picked up. Water and ash has never failed to clean the mess.
Only if you misplaced your feeler gauges and it happens to be the correct thickness to adjust those solid lifters ;-PMilt said:xclimber said:I have to agree. I never had anything on my glass that ashes and warm water didn't remove.BrowningBAR said:I'm honestly confused by people using all of these products and razor blades to clean the glass. I've had some really dark and thick creosote on some of the used stoves I've picked up. Water and ash has never failed to clean the mess.
Well, you can't really expect me to use a beer can shim on a BMW motorcycle can you?
I once owned an R90S . Nice ride indeed!Milt said:xclimber said:I have to agree. I never had anything on my glass that ashes and warm water didn't remove.BrowningBAR said:I'm honestly confused by people using all of these products and razor blades to clean the glass. I've had some really dark and thick creosote on some of the used stoves I've picked up. Water and ash has never failed to clean the mess.
Well, you can't really expect me to use a beer can shim on a BMW motorcycle can you?
I usually just swing the stove door open, 90 degrees to the stove , place a bunch of newspapers under the door and now you have a good work area easy to clean up when your done. Keep everything right on the news paper. I never double dip into the water. Clean paper towel goes in first. Then it leaves you clean water for the final rinse.babzog said:I've never cleaned my glass while warm... always waited till the stove was fully shut down before cleaning it so I guess that's why the windex and whatnot haven't hurt my glass any. It never occurred to me that a water/ash mix would be a potent cleaner, sounds more like a mess waiting to happen. But... I will try it one time, even if just to see if you guys are joking around. So, what's the secret recipe? Ash paste? Ash soup?
+1,,,,,,I clean my Quad glass about 2 or 3 times the whole heating season if that.Seastrike said:Agree w/ BrowningBAR.
Im burning hotter fires this year and having no issues with dirty glass.
It's about the wood !
BrowningBAR said:MF1635 Owner said:What brand have you guys seem to find that does the best job getting the cresote off the glass on the doors?
Ash, water, paper towel.
And drier wood.
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