How to Remove Scratches from a Ceramic Cooker Hob – TESTED

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Scratches on glass cooker tops are not uncommon. They make your cooker top look old and ugly.

I was cooking the other day. Food dribbled under the pan, heated up and burned into carbon (I was unaware this had happened).

I don’t like washing up, so I decided not to use a spoon. Instead I used a technique Chef’s call ‘Tossing’.

I tossed and shook my pan vigorously on the glass cooker top until I got weary and couldn’t toss anymore.

Once I had finished, I removed my pan and to my surprise there was a stupid amount of white scratches on the ceramic glass cooker top.

I rent, so I wasn’t worried about the cooker. I was worried about how I was going to cover this up so I get my full deposit back!

So in this video I test 6 ways to remove scratches from a glass ceramic stove cooker hob top and confirm which method is the best.

Product I used to remove the scratches:

US: https://amzn.to/35ZBQix

UK: https://amzn.to/3fteSmI

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Date: April 7, 2019

45 thoughts on “How to Remove Scratches from a Ceramic Cooker Hob – TESTED

  1. Be careful following the advice of this video. As other commentors are pointing out, the methods might be ok for gently cleaning off metal scuffs, but could be counterproductive for actual scratches.

    I tried the glass polish method, as advised (with cerium oxide) and it made a bad situation SO much worse. I'll probably have to pay for a replacement for my landlord when I move out now.

    I think this video is probably not made by a professional, and does not clearly outline the technical steps that would be needed for a layperson to reliably achieve an improvement.

    Maybe actual experts could weigh in: Is this video fake/mistaken? Or just omitting steps and specifics that would be required to use these methods safely?

  2. I've just watched another lady trying the task and neither of you have used a sponge with a scrubbing layer ( yellow with a green layer ). I've had my stove for over 20 years and it still looks almost as good as new.

  3. I have an oven like this and the same kind of "scratches." I took a box cutter blade and worked the scratches. Took about 5 minutes and they were all gone. I did not know about these methods but when I realized the "scratches" were raised, I figured they weren't really scratches. The polish method is probably better but you'll have to use a higher grit.

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