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Have not seen this topic for some time. How to care for our expensive
canopies. I use the Mequiar's products: for scratches #17 Clear Plastic Cleaner, for very fine scratches #10 Clear Plastic Polish, and for daily care #18 Clear Plastic Detailer. What about the rest of you? Lots of new products to clean and care for automotice clear plastic headlight covers and such. Guy |
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On Mar 23, 12:27*am, Guy wrote:
Have not seen this topic for some time. *How to care for our expensive canopies. I use the Mequiar's products: for scratches #17 Clear Plastic Cleaner, for very fine scratches #10 Clear Plastic Polish, and for daily care #18 Clear Plastic Detailer. What about the rest of you? *Lots of new products to clean and care for automotice clear plastic headlight covers and such. Maybe not what you were looking for but I once was able to take a very old, scratched, hazy HP-14 center canopy and make it look like new with a Micro-Mesh kit. I was amazed. Just follow the instructions. 2 hours of considerable elbow grease. Initially looks pretty scary because you start with relatively coarse sandpaper. I guess this was really canopy repair more than canopy care. FWIW Regards, -Doug |
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On Mar 23, 12:27*am, Guy wrote:
Have not seen this topic for some time. *How to care for our expensive canopies. I use the Mequiar's products: for scratches #17 Clear Plastic Cleaner, for very fine scratches #10 Clear Plastic Polish, and for daily care #18 Clear Plastic Detailer. What about the rest of you? *Lots of new products to clean and care for automotice clear plastic headlight covers and such. Guy The advice I have been given is WATER, PLENTY OF WATER!!! When the canopy gets marred with grease or fingerprints I first take the canopy completely off, stand it on edge with the weight bearing portion on a soft sponge and towel and let the hose run down the inside and outside for quite some time. I get a new "Super Absorber" synthetic chamois and wipe from front to back, avoiding swirling motions. If the canopy is really clean with only a small smudge I use Plexus with a miracle fabric cloth. I try not to clean the canopy on a daily basis for fear of creating fine scratches that accumulate in number over time. I do not routinely use a canopy cover simply to avoid scratching the canopy. Do not use solvent near the canopy for fear of splashing. In the Spring, avoid parking the glider near trees that are releasing pollen as it sticks to the canopy. To recondition a canopy with many scratches I have heard that Micro-Mesh is the treatment of choice. Happy soaring this Spring, John aka November Bravo John aka November Bravo |
#4
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On Mar 23, 6:08*am, November Bravo wrote:
On Mar 23, 12:27*am, Guy wrote: Have not seen this topic for some time. *How to care for our expensive canopies. I use the Mequiar's products: for scratches #17 Clear Plastic Cleaner, for very fine scratches #10 Clear Plastic Polish, and for daily care #18 Clear Plastic Detailer. What about the rest of you? *Lots of new products to clean and care for automotice clear plastic headlight covers and such. Guy The advice I have been given is WATER, PLENTY OF WATER!!! *When the canopy gets marred with grease or fingerprints I first take the canopy completely off, stand it on edge with the weight bearing portion on a soft sponge and towel and let the hose run down the inside and outside for quite some time. *I get a new "Super Absorber" synthetic chamois and wipe from front to back, avoiding swirling motions. *If the canopy is really clean with only a small smudge I use Plexus with a miracle fabric cloth. *I try not to clean the canopy on a daily basis for fear of creating fine scratches that accumulate in number over time. *I do not routinely use a canopy cover simply to avoid scratching the canopy. *Do not use solvent near the canopy for fear of splashing. *In the Spring, avoid parking the glider near trees that are releasing pollen as it sticks to the canopy. *To recondition a canopy with many scratches I have heard that Micro-Mesh is the treatment of choice. Happy soaring this Spring, John aka November Bravo John aka November Bravo I clean regularly with LOTS of water. About once every two years or so, I spend several hours with a very fine plastic polish and many cotton flannel polishing cloths to 'de-scratch'. For 'real' scratch removal, I start with 600 grit, then 800, 1200, 2000, and buff with plastic polish (Blue Magic, or Mothers). If ammonia is listed in the ingrediants, (like Windex) or you smell even a whiff of it in a cleaning product, don't use it on your acrylic. |
#5
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Water to get all dust, rock, animals off the plexi.
Plexus (or equivalent) before every flight, inside and out. Prevents static that attracts dust. Makes canopy slick and easy to clean next time. Use a good cotton T-shirt or equivalent, wash often. I never leave a canopy cover on for long (if tied down out west, put the cover inside the cockpit, covering the instruments). Unless it's blowing rocks, a cover does more damage than good, IMO. After I clean the canopy (right after rigging), I put on a CLEAN elastic cover to keep the cockpit cool until just before hookup (I take it off from inside the cockpit while strapped in). Kirk 66 |
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What about Pledge?
Guy |
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On Mar 24, 12:00*am, Guy wrote:
What about Pledge? Guy Pledge has solvents in it that promote crazing. Don't use it. I had a flat-wrap canopy literally explode when someone tried to clean it with Pledge. Quite spectacular: stress cracks started after a few weconds, gradually became very visible, then BANG - pieces of canopy everywhere. I still have some crazed fragments of that canopy here as a souvenir.. Do not use this, despite what your local "experts" may promote. Use a product designed for plexi... Hope this helps, Best Regards, Dave |
#8
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if you want to yellow the canopy and add static to pick up dust and dirt
you'll wipe off later while scratching the canopy then go ahead and pledge your canopy.....but please don't do mine! tim "Guy" wrote in message ... What about Pledge? Guy __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4971 (20100324) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4971 (20100324) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com |
#9
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kirk.stant wrote:
Water to get all dust, rock, animals off the plexi. Plexus (or equivalent) before every flight, inside and out. Prevents static that attracts dust. Makes canopy slick and easy to clean next time. Use a good cotton T-shirt or equivalent, wash often. My theory is dust doesn't cause scratches; it's rubbing dust that causes scratches. The glider is usually kept in the trailer, so it's protected from dust except while flying, plus 2 hours for rigging/derigging. I don't clean the outside of the canopy unless the dust becomes visible enough to see in flight. That's 5 to 10 flights, typically. I don't clean the inside of the canopy more than twice a year - it just doesn't get dusty. To clean it, I remove the dust by dragging a soft, wet, folded rag along the each side (left and right), front to back, just once. A fresh side of the cloth is used for each drag. I then spray on Novus 1 or 210 plexiglas cleaner, and gently polish the canopy just enough to clear up the spray. I never leave a canopy cover on for long (if tied down out west, put the cover inside the cockpit, covering the instruments). Unless it's blowing rocks, a cover does more damage than good, IMO. I don't like to put a cover on, either, and I don't when it's in the trailer. If I leave it tied down, I'll usually put the cover on it after ensuring the canopy is dust free. At soaring camps, that might mean cleaning it more often than when I put away in the trailer, as I do at home. My cover is thick, very form fitting, has good elastic straps, and does not move or flap in even strong winds. After I clean the canopy (right after rigging), I put on a CLEAN elastic cover to keep the cockpit cool until just before hookup (I take it off from inside the cockpit while strapped in). Instead of putting cover of on it, I put a shade inside to cover the cockpit area. I prop open the rear of the canopy with a "firm" foam block (about 2" open) so air can circulate. It stays cool enough, particularly if there is a breeze, but not quite as cool as a full cover and some air circulation. 15 years later, the canopy has very few dust scratches. There are some handling scratches, especially around the sliding vent. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#10
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On Mar 23, 9:08*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
kirk.stant wrote: Water to get all dust, rock, animals off the plexi. Plexus (or equivalent) before every flight, inside and out. *Prevents static that attracts dust. *Makes canopy slick and easy to clean next time. Use a good cotton T-shirt or equivalent, wash often. My theory is dust doesn't cause scratches; it's rubbing dust that causes scratches. The glider is usually kept in the trailer, so it's protected from dust except while flying, plus 2 hours for rigging/derigging. I don't clean the outside of the canopy unless the dust becomes visible enough to see in flight. That's 5 to 10 flights, typically. I don't clean the inside of the canopy more than twice a year - it just doesn't get dusty. To clean it, I remove the dust by dragging a soft, wet, folded rag along the each side (left and right), front to back, just once. A fresh side of the cloth is used for each drag. I then spray on Novus 1 or 210 plexiglas cleaner, and gently polish the canopy just enough to clear up the spray. I never leave a canopy cover on for long (if tied down out west, put the cover inside the cockpit, covering the instruments). *Unless it's blowing rocks, a cover does more damage than good, IMO. I don't like to put a cover on, either, and I don't when it's in the trailer. If I leave it tied down, I'll usually put the cover on it after ensuring the canopy is dust free. At soaring camps, that might mean cleaning it more often than when I put away in the trailer, as I do at home. My cover is thick, very form fitting, has good elastic straps, and does not move or flap in even strong winds. After I clean the canopy (right after rigging), I put on a CLEAN elastic cover to keep the cockpit cool until just before hookup (I take it off from inside the cockpit while strapped in). Instead of putting cover of on it, I put a shade inside to cover the cockpit area. I prop open the rear of the canopy with a "firm" foam block (about 2" open) so air can circulate. It stays cool enough, particularly if there is a breeze, but not quite as cool as a full cover and some air circulation. 15 years later, the canopy has very few dust scratches. There are some handling scratches, especially around the sliding vent. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarmhttp://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz I use a hose or carry a bucket of water and sponge to the glider and eitehr hose down the canoy or squeeze a sponge above the canopy to wet it. If needed I will gently wipe in a straight line with a clean bare hand while appying the water. I'll then dry with a clean microfibre towel again only using straight lines. A wet sponge or dirty cotton material rubbed on a dusty canopy is just wet sanding, but I see it done by others all the time. If the inside is dusty I'll use a damp microfibre towel with straight line wipes, turning the towel at each wipe to remove dust. Then small spray with Plexus inside and out and wipe with clean microfiber towels. The silicone in the Plexus really helps cut down static build- up and dust attraction. Once dry and clean I put on a Franklin canopy cap to keep the cockpit cool. That canopy cap is kept spotless clean and only put on a canopy after the canopy has been cleaned and only used briefly before flight (e.g. not overnight collecting dust in its porous fabric) . Costco sells packs of microfiber towels and a usual canopy cleaning I go through about four of them. They survive washing well, but if I drop one in the dirt etc. I'll just toss it. For the occasional fine scratch I'll use LP Aero acrylic polish (e.g. I somehow scratched the inside of the canopy near the vent). Generally avoid wiping the canopy unnecessarily. Darryl |
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