Cooker cleaning service
Discussion
We paid £60 for a slightly smaller cooker at our own place, same guy quoted us £75 for our current cooker which is 1.5 oven range with ceramic hob. He basically dismantles it, puts the parts in a "vat" of "stuff" in the back of his van, and it comes out like new. Well worth the money IMHO.
Paddy_N_Murphy said:
Roop said:
Save yourself a load of cash and buy some Oven Pride. Works a charm - oven, trays and racks come up like new with zero effort. Just used some last week on our oven.
Sorry got to disagree.Call in the experts and the Oven comes up like brand new. They have the right chems etc.
I have used Oven-U and Cookaburra.
Both good an have dipped bits of my Barbeque for me at the same time.
About £40-50 IIRC.
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
If you don't like nasty chemicals, Astonish works very well, but is an abrasive, so needs a bit of elbow grease.
Roop said:
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
I agree, it's very good stuff. Before I moved out of my last place, I drew the short straw and got the oven to clean. I used 2 lots - one for grilles, the other for removable panels. It came up virtually as good as new.bga said:
Roop said:
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
I agree, it's very good stuff. Before I moved out of my last place, I drew the short straw and got the oven to clean. I used 2 lots - one for grilles, the other for removable panels. It came up virtually as good as new.An alternative is to buy some high molar sodium hydroxide (aka caustic soda) solution in a plastic vat and dip your ovenware in it overnight. Clearly you can't do this with your actual oven though - Oven pride does the business there as it's a gel it sticks on and doesn't run everywhere.
Roop said:
bga said:
Roop said:
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
I agree, it's very good stuff. Before I moved out of my last place, I drew the short straw and got the oven to clean. I used 2 lots - one for grilles, the other for removable panels. It came up virtually as good as new.An alternative is to buy some high molar sodium hydroxide (aka caustic soda) solution in a plastic vat and dip your ovenware in it overnight. Clearly you can't do this with your actual oven though - Oven pride does the business there as it's a gel it sticks on and doesn't run everywhere.
CatherineJ said:
Roop said:
bga said:
Roop said:
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
I agree, it's very good stuff. Before I moved out of my last place, I drew the short straw and got the oven to clean. I used 2 lots - one for grilles, the other for removable panels. It came up virtually as good as new.An alternative is to buy some high molar sodium hydroxide (aka caustic soda) solution in a plastic vat and dip your ovenware in it overnight. Clearly you can't do this with your actual oven though - Oven pride does the business there as it's a gel it sticks on and doesn't run everywhere.
£40 for an oven clean is quite cheap, it is 3x + the price here...
Roop said:
CatherineJ said:
Roop said:
bga said:
Roop said:
It's nothing like Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner or that spray on rubbish, Oven Pride actually works.
I agree, it's very good stuff. Before I moved out of my last place, I drew the short straw and got the oven to clean. I used 2 lots - one for grilles, the other for removable panels. It came up virtually as good as new.An alternative is to buy some high molar sodium hydroxide (aka caustic soda) solution in a plastic vat and dip your ovenware in it overnight. Clearly you can't do this with your actual oven though - Oven pride does the business there as it's a gel it sticks on and doesn't run everywhere.
£40 for an oven clean is quite cheap, it is 3x + the price here...
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