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Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2025
This product doesn’t work. I am commercial glazier, we tested on the job site and is trash.
Test4echo3
Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2025
For anyone, ANYONE, saying this kit does not work and gives a NEGATIVE REVIEW....... I have this to say "RTFM, follow the directions, watch a YouTube video of someone doing the work and LEARN" because this Kit does work. For anyone thinking you're going to get "Instant Gratification" with one pass and gives a negative review tells me you didn't do what I said above. it took over 5 hours for me to do 1 piece of glass 17"x40". 4.5 hours of it was doing the polishing to get the halo removed and to make it as clear as possible. Just as the DIRECTIONS say "Repeat the polishing process as MANY TIMES AS NESSESSARY until the glass is virtually clear" and that's what I did, you can see the results with the attached pictures.I can't state this enough......(RTFM) READ THE DIRECTIONS IT COMES WITH. If you can't understand the directions, get someone who understands 1 of the 5 languages (or use google translate) this kit comes with.Great Product, works 100% as described.
Brian Catherall
Reviewed in Canada on May 17, 2024
Was nervous doing the inside of a $2500.00 aquarium, it worked incredibly.It literally turned out like the day I bought it, very happy and highly recommended it.
joerob
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2024
I don’t do a lot of reviews. I only review products that either far exceed my expectations or fall far short of my expectations. This product is GREAT! Anyone who says this is not worth the money or that it doesn’t work either didn’t follow the directions or did not have the patience to see the job through. It is a long arduous process that some may not have the time or patience to complete. I cannot imagine a more difficult job than mine and it worked great – but took HOURS!I have an Pella patio door that a 100 Labrador Retriever had scratched by jumping up on the glasss wanting to be let in until the bottom half door was completely opaque and felt like sandpaper. I thought it was hopeless but considering the cost of a new door and installation, I decided to give it a try. I first ordered the Glass Polishing kit with 3 inch pads and also some Glass Net 200 (aggressive) disks for use with an electric drill. After about 6 hours of sanding and polishing all I had done was make a mess, but I could see how the system could work if I had the proper tools. So, I bought an XNet Glass Scratch Removal System with the 5 inch pads. Also bought a $40 variable speed sander/polisher from Harbor Freight. In about another 3-4 hours my door was unbelievably clear. If had started with the right kit and variable speed polisher it probably would have taken me 5-6 hours. Couldn't be happier with the result.Final advice: 1. Don’t start this job unless you’ve got the time and patience to compete it; 2. Start with the proper tools or you’re wasting time and money; 3. Watch carefully the video on deep scratch removal on the Glass Polish Store web site. It is invaluable! Good luck!
melissa
Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2023
I saw several not so great reviews on this but still bought the Glass Polish Pro Kit. Look guys it WORKS, it worked perfectly actually!! I was welding a steel beam above a glass door, I covered the glass with plastic and carboard, but in one section the weld sputter got behind my protective barriers somehow and traveled down the glass, basically the hot molten laval fell down along the glass to the base of the glass door and etched 3-4" long deep scratches into the tempered glass, like in 5 different places. I didnt even know I had damaged the door until the owner mentioned it to me later, I was shocked. The door is a monster 16' long sliding glass door thats probably $20,000 new. There is no way I was gonna wanna replace that door, this kit saved my bacon. Here is the deal guys... This is not a fast process, expecially if your doing a large area like I did. It wasnt fast but did the job. I went and bought the cheapest variable speed grinder at Harbor Freight for $35, I wanted it to be light weight because I knew I would be holding it up and moving it around a lot, so I went with the cheap one. Set it at about 3000 RPM ish set at 5/6 on speed, some times set at 4, oh and just forget everything you know about sand paper and wood and grinding other things, this is different. Working with glass is different. First these guys call glassnet 120, 200, 60.. whatever their numbers are.... they are just confusing... ... just forget all their numbers, they are confusing because I thing they are backyards.. So Just start with the mesh ... the one that looks like actual mesh like 80 grit like sand paper, and go dry... don't add water... I tried.... one would think keep it cool and wet ... no I found that once the glass actually heat up some some Magic happens and the glass gives up and says... you win... ill let you in.....then the white particles start flying...meaning your cutting into it... and keep it flat... and push on it with some good pressure... with some speed... I tried it at like 2000 RPM and it was just taking forever and not really getting into the bottom of my scratches... but once I increased the speed, pushed on it and ALWAYS kept in moving around a lot, never stay in one spot.... here is the thing you think oh im gonna just stay in exactly the area of the damage... well you just gotta move it around ... trust me .. its gonna be ok.... then use the Green pad.....for a while and go over the whole thing like 3x in a bit larger area... try to LOOK for any white circle marks from the prior grit and basically sand them away so all you see is a white fog or looks like frosted glass.... again this is all dry... heat and speed and pressure... all work togther here.... Then go to your blue one as your third step and do the same thing... just each time trying to buff away any of the prior lines or haze until you get to a nice uniform frosted glass look.... look all over your work for any white scratch lines... go back to green if you have to then back to blue.... then once your sure you got all your white lines out from your prior grit and its very uniform then 4th....use the white buff pad with the bottle of polish tan/orange paste compound. I used the sprayer on that with filtered water... and sprayed little here and little there ...keeping it just a tiny be wet. Cause in heat here in AZ that white pad thing was drying out fast. Same thing go over it a pretty fast speed... 5 outta 6 speed on my cheap varible speed grinder polisher... you can hear that thing working... whining at me....as it took the paste of and left a clear glass behind it..... and after going over the whole thing about 3-4 times ... wiped if off and it was crystal clear not joke...(#1 MESH, #2 GREEN, #BLUE, #4 WHITE pad with paste) I did have to go back and work the edges of my area a couple more times with the white/paste... I could see a light haze at the outside edge of my work area which I had to work extra on to blend in to match the original shine. This system works... oh and I used a synthetic carnuba like car wax over the glass next (not real carnuba wax use the synthetic) and there seriously was like no sign of all the weld sputter deep trenches... Oh and I did practice on a 1/2" tempered glass table first just to get the process down on tempered glass before I started all this.... oh and that 80 mesh ... me using it on the glass table first I think took some of the bite out of it so it wasn't cutting into my door glass as much... something you might want to do.... break it down some (what I'm calling 80 grit mesh down a little on some thing else before you take it to your real piece of glass... that way your not scratching the crap out of it as much as if it the mesh was brand new... Any way The area of weld sputter I fixed was like 36" x 48".... it was a huge area but I had no choice but to tackle it since I wasn't buying a new door $$$. This system saved me... Thanks for putting this out there for me to buy, the owner and a few other people were like... wow... I didn't even know that was possible....
Joty85
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2023
These suck. Point blank, period, the end. They have about as much cut as a pad that you wash your dishes with. The Polish is watery, and the sanding pads will burn and distort your glass before they take out a scratch. It’ll cost you MORE in the long run to fix your windshield after using these than just paying a professional, because a scratch is like 1mm thick, and the swirls from these are 3-5 inches wide (depending on what size you purchase), x however long you choose to destroy, I mean use them, on your windshield. If you want to give your money away, donate to a charity. But please, don’t waste your money on this.
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