suzanne
Posts: 688
Joined: 3/29/2009 Status: offline
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This gets rid of areas of very light mineral deposit inside a bottle and helps bottles that have heavier deposits look better. Examine bottle for very thin spots or very large bubbles. Mark these spots on outside of bottle if you think you may forget where they are. Don't do this on bottles under 5 inches. A lot of times their glass is unbelievably thin and they may crack. You need a high speed electric drill, a plastic coat hanger, and an old rag that has a rough texture, like an old dish towel. Cut up hanger so that you have a long piece. Wrap tape around one end, overlapping the end, to pad sharpness of hanger end that could scratch bottle. Cut off strip of rag, making it long, not wide. 2 inches wide at bottom works good. Tape rag to coat hanger piece, put in drill. Electricians tape works great for this because it's nice and stretchy; you can get a secure tape job without gobs of tape that will get stuck in bottle. Moisten rag and stuff in bottle using whatever you can find thats pointy. Lay bottle and drill on something to protect table, but not a towel, it can get wrapped around the drill chuck. I use phone book. Buff inside of bottle at high speed. Most electric drills have a button on them you can push and they run without you having to hold the trigger down constantly. Reverse drill direction in order to make contact with all parts of the bottle. Doing this changes the shape of the rag and gets sickness from all angles. This process should take 5 minutes or less. If after 5 minutes of buffing bottle is still sick inside it is time to go to Plan B. It's hard explaining how to fix bottles in a few sentences. It would be like thinking you can take a 15 minute class and then do auto body repair. All of these guys on here that tumble spent months practicing at home on their own to get good at it. So did I.
< Message edited by suzanne -- 2/20/2010 7:43:31 AM >
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