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I HAVE A PLACE ON MY FRONT RIGHT LARGER BURNER ON MY SMOOTH COOKTOP STOVE THAT IS DISCOLORED AND NO MATTER HOW MUCH CERAMIC STOVETOP CLEANER I USE-IT REMAINS VERY DARK
WHAT CAN YOU SUGGEST?
I have the same discoloration. I bought the cleaner and pads that they told me to use and two of my burners are discolored. I have tried vinegar, baking soda, 409, ceramic cleaner, and anyhting else that I could think of and nothing seems to remove the discoloratoinI have the same discoloration. I bought the cleaner and pads that they told me to use and two of my burners are discolored. I have tried vinegar, baking soda, 409, ceramic cleaner, and anyhting else that I could think of and nothing seems to remove the discoloratoin
I have the same problem, two burner with terrible descolration.. dont know what to do to remove them.. have you guys used cerama brite ? is it working ?I have the same problem, two burner with terrible descolration.. dont know what to do to remove them.. have you guys used cerama brite ? is it working ?
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We Use Debruce Polish on all our cooktops. Debruce also works on
stainless steel and polished granite, marble, porcelain, formica and
glass. DeBruce is non-toxic odor-less and eco-friendly. You can get
DeBruce on line at debrucepolish.com.
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What I would try. Assuming the "burners" means the cast iron assemblies on top of the stainless steel, remove them to an area outside. Perhaps on a piece of plywood, and clean them with oven cleaner. Grease may drip off them, so a deck or driveway are unacceptable. Wear gloves and watch splatters. Wash thoroughly with fresh water before reusing. Beware. Caustic chemicals can discolor stainless
Hi- High temps make for tricky maintenance of glass or ceramic tops. The heat element must pass its heat energy through the glass or ceramic and into the pan. Water droplets will steam away, while a spatter of oil or even a few grains of sugar will melt and burn to a tough film of carbon on the surface. The obvious preventitive measures of checking pan bottoms thoroughly before contact with clean (yes- very clean) cooktop surface mean most spots may be small, they can be annoying to look at and tough to remove. My best cleaning results for these spots came from using a VERY small amount of OVEN cleaner (use gloves) on a paper towel placed on spot for a few minutes. A clean, new razor blade may be used to scrape off film. Hope this helps. - Thanks- ED
We Use Debruce Polish on all our cooktops. Debruce also works on
stainless steel and polished granite, marble, porcelain, formica and
glass. DeBruce is non-toxic odor-less and eco-friendly. You can get
DeBruce on line at debrucepolish.com.
In addition to polishing up the end of the igniter as mentioned above, remove the burner cap cover and and the round burner cap. As noted above, electrical contact or grounding is an important element in the spark igniter function. Any poor contact surface can cause the igniters to continue to spark after a burner lites. If everything seems in order, polish the underside of the aluminum burner cap and the top side of the aluminum burner base (where they come in contact with each other). This is part of the grounding circuit for the igniters. I used an "SOS" pad. In our case, these parts had tarnished with age. My wife was very happy when I fixed this one.
I have the same discoloration. I bought the cleaner and pads that they told me to use and two of my burners are discolored. I have tried vinegar, baking soda, 409, ceramic cleaner, and anyhting else that I could think of and nothing seems to remove the discoloratoin
I have the same problem, two burner with terrible descolration.. dont know what to do to remove them.. have you guys used cerama brite ? is it working ?
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