Nikolai Sklobovsky
New member
We had a little accident tonight...
A brand new pan was left empty on a brand new (installed last night and very expensive) induction cooktop while the cell was set to a max power... :-(
Yeah, I know. "Don't". Well, it wasn't me. But I paid for it..
Well, it didn't melt down completely, but "just partially" was enough... :-(
No, no, the house is still intact.
The pan is totalled, but that was a matter of $20, **** happens.
What bugs me the most is that the melted paint/metal left some hard ugly looking residue on the otherwsie shiny glass surface of the cooktop. Our initial attempts to get rid of it lead to no success.
Anybody has any idea of how to clean a sturdy glass surface from a melted paint/metal?
It seems that the metal was steel, not cast iron.
Acid? Heat? Cold?
Any practical hint is appreciated!
A brand new pan was left empty on a brand new (installed last night and very expensive) induction cooktop while the cell was set to a max power... :-(
Yeah, I know. "Don't". Well, it wasn't me. But I paid for it..
Well, it didn't melt down completely, but "just partially" was enough... :-(
No, no, the house is still intact.
The pan is totalled, but that was a matter of $20, **** happens.
What bugs me the most is that the melted paint/metal left some hard ugly looking residue on the otherwsie shiny glass surface of the cooktop. Our initial attempts to get rid of it lead to no success.
Anybody has any idea of how to clean a sturdy glass surface from a melted paint/metal?
It seems that the metal was steel, not cast iron.
Acid? Heat? Cold?
Any practical hint is appreciated!