Saw this listed on Slashdot, made by a German company called Nanopool. They invented an actual pure silicon dioxide that is in a vehicle of either alcohol or water, allow easy coat & cleaning of many surfaces once dry.
I saw this all over the tech sites yesterday. The two things I did not see addressed were: would this be available to home users (I foresee issues with glass particles in the lungs, so I predict this will be industrial use only), and how much does it cost?
Quote www.physorg.com
In the home, spray-on glass would eliminate the need for scrubbing and make most cleaning products obsolete. Since it is available in both water-based and alcohol-based solutions, it can be used in the oven, in bathrooms, tiles, sinks, and almost every other surface in the home, and one spray is said to last a year. Liquid glass spray is perhaps the most important nanotechnology product to emerge to date. It will be available in DIY stores in Britain soon, with prices starting at around £5 ($8 US). Other outlets, such as many supermarkets, may be unwilling to stock the products because they make enormous profits from cleaning products that need to be replaced regularly, and liquid glass would make virtually all of them obsolete.
Further info: www.nanopool.eu/couk/index.htm
The Gov has banned all the good cleaning products, and all that is left is this enviro clean crap that doesn't work well, if at all.
The EPA & CDC regulate and sometimes ban certain cleaning products for a reason - they can contain chemicals that cause cancer, brain damage, kidney and liver failure... and more fun stuff.
The green cleaning products (or the "enviro clean crap", as you call it ) work amazingly well, and are fast becoming the standard in commercial and industrial cleaning companies.
:thumbsup: john
v188 said:The Gov has banned all the good cleaning products
For one reason only:
I switched to Green Works and Seventh Generation cleaners about a year ago and never looked back. I occasionally run into something that I need 409 for, but not very often. The "enviro crap" works just fine.
I saw this all over the tech sites yesterday. The two things I did not see addressed were: would this be available to home users (I foresee issues with glass particles in the lungs, so I predict this will be industrial use only), and how much does it cost?
Can I interest any of you guys in some cold fusion, I just happen to have some of the plans real cheap.
How about putting it on a windshield before it is pitted?:twothumbsFirst thing I thought of was how it would perform on a windshield that has been sand-pitted.