You can also use a product called Mirror Glaze. It comes in two flavors,
one in a white squeeze bottle has a mild abrasive for scratch removal.
Another flavor comes in a blue/grey bottle and is for regular cleaning.
You spread it on, let it dry and buff it off. Lots of work, but works well.
http://www.meguiars.com/?home-clear-...lastic-Cleaner
Good Luck...
Guy
"tony roberts" wrote in message
news:nospam-D71DE8.21522029062006@shawnews...
Hi Kyle
I don't recall the name of the product but it is easy to find - most
Harley dealers carry it and it is for removing the haze and small
scratches from motorbike windshields. It comes in a white plastic
squeeze bottle with red writing. They make one for haze and two for
different levels of scratches. Awesome stuff - takes a fair amount of
work but the results on my old windows was excellent.
HTH
Tony
C-GICE
--
Tony Roberts
PP-ASEL
VFR OTT
Night
Cessna 172H C-GICE
In article ,
"Kyle Boatright" wrote:
I've noticed that the windscreen and canopy on my RV-6 has developed a
haze
on its exterior.
The history of the canopy is that the canopy was manufactured about 7
years
ago, with the airplane first flying about 5 years ago. The airplane has
always been hangared (other than the occasional overnight stay
somewhere),
and has been treated properly during its life. My cleaner of choice is
Plexus, which Aircraft Spruce and several other outlets sell for
aircraft
canopies.
The only things I can imagine that could have caused the haze on the
canopy
is either the plexus, exposure to corvis oil (the smoky stuff) at
airshows,
or some sort of airborne contaminant in my hangar (e.g. a neighbor spray
painting).
For what it is worth, the canopy doesn't have any scratches, so I
probably
don't need an aggressive abraisive cleaner.
The bottom line is that I'm interested in removing this haze layer. Any
recommendations?
Thanks,
KB