Propane
Burnishing and Buffing With Aztec Products
Propane Burnishing and
Buffing: Innovations in the Field of Floor Care.
Dry Burnishing. Spray Buffing. Both revolve
around rotary buffing for restoration or repair
of the polished surface of a floor.
Dry burnishing and spray buffing
differ from each other through the use of a
medium and the speed of a pad rotation. Dry
burnishing is performed on dry floors at rpm’s
of 1000 to over 2000. Spray buffing on the other
hand is performed with a liquid medium such as a
cleanser at rpm’s of 175 to 1000.
Increase Floor Coverage
Rates with Dry Burnishing
Dry burnishing is accomplished through the use
of a high pad speed and a larger floor machine.
The result is dramatically increased floor
coverage rates. An operator can burnish 25,000
square feet of floor surface in an hour—a
considerable improvement over the 1,000, 2,000,
or 10,000 square feet, that could be covered in
the same time with the low-, medium-, or
high-speed spray buffing machines.
For operators who must polish
large areas of floor space such as those found
in supermarkets or department stores, burnishing
will require less than time than spray buffing.
Burnishing Achieves the
"Wet Shine" of New Polish
Dry burnishing operates at high rpm’s and
therefore conducts a greater amount of abrasive
energy through the floor pad. The pad strips
away worn top layers of floor polish while
smoothing (burnishing) the underlying layer to a
very glossy surface. The result is a highly
polished layer that has the shining "wet"
appearance of recently-applied floor polish.
Restore the Appearance
of Base Polish With Spray Buffing
The purpose of dry burnishing is to polish but
not necessarily to clean. High speed burnishing
cleans the appearance of a floor by removing the
top layers of soiled or worn polish. To create a
clean, glossy surface, spray buffing combines a
liquid medium such as a cleanser with fewer
rotations per minute. Spray buffing decreases
the loss of polish by replenishing floors with a
rejuvenator.
Extend the Base Polish’s
Life With Spray Buffing
Burnishing is hard on a polish; the base coat
can be worn away rapidly. In addition, most
floor surfaces underneath the polish are
somewhat irregular. If a floor machine operator
is not careful, the polish may be completely
worn away on the higher points of the floor.
Unpolished portions of a floor are unprotected
and vulnerable to damage from traffic.
Furthermore, the machine operator is usually
unaware of the removal of the base coat of
polish because the exposure of floor is
difficult to detect. In such cases, a
maintenance team may find itself buffing the
unprotected floor tile, which can cause serious
damage.
When the polish has worn off in
this fashion, maintenance professionals must
strip and refinish the entire floor. By
contrast, spray buffing is a much less abrasive
procedure and removes less polish from the
floor. While both dry burnishing and spray
buffing are excellent ways to achieve floors
that look as though they are newly laid, dry
burnishing may require operators to adhere a
stricter maintenance schedule.
Regardless of the method, Aztec
propane buffers and burnishers will be your most
economical solution when productivity,
efficiency, and reliability are considered.