Thanks Stu, I missed that part on your previous description.

On Apr 23, 2015, at 9:08 AM, stuart rosen <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:

Hey Randy,
When I was cleaning the trucks using laundry detergents(many years ago-I was in my 20's)-we scrubbed them with brushes by hand.
Their were a lot of trucks- I remember how clean my hands were and how red they got.
We didn't wear any protection or gloves.



On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 8:49 AM, Randy Frye <rfrye@comcast.net> wrote:
they stayed red for days.

Hi Stu what did you mean by that. 

Best Regards,
Randy Frye, CEI Surface Pros
239-253-1991

On Apr 23, 2015, at 8:43 AM, stuart rosen <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:

Nice-That is a great job-client must have been thrilled.
That is an old travertine floor which is way more difficult to clean than a more modern travertine floor in a residence.
The floor Chris did is basically unfilled.
Clients generally want to keep that look but will always ask to fill the bigger voids leaving alone the smaller ones.
The more modern floors(filled travertine) are generally easier to clean-once they have been extracted and any open voids filled you can continue honing doe the desired level.
Yes Roger if you use a lot of tide with bleach- the house will smell like the washing machine overflowed.
It is a great cleaner though-when I use to clean those trucks my hands were like surgically clean-however they stayed red for days.
In place of those products and even oxi-clean products we make our own mix of sodium percarbonate and commercial laundry detergent. Sodium percarbonate is oxygen bleach which is the main ingredient in most of those oxy-type cleaners.
It is easy to work with,effective and has no bleach odors.

You can google it up-we have even used it to poultice large areas on floors.


 

On Wed, Apr 22, 2015 at 4:21 PM, Chris <csantospago@gmail.com> wrote:
Baird, yes I cleaned and extracted twice. Then I made the 1st cut with vortex red dot and they extracted the slurry. 
Next day I did grout repair. 
3rd day I used 220 diamonds to clean up the excess grout and finished with #1 vortex

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 22, 2015, at 2:35 PM, Baird Standish <bairdstandish@gmail.com> wrote:

Maybe stupid question, but do you clean (get truck mount guy in etc.  ) before or after any honing and/or polishing?


Sent from Mailbox


On Wed, Apr 22, 2015 at 1:57 PM, Chris <csantospago@gmail.com> wrote:

Just did an 800 sq ft travertine floor that was installed in 1920 and was really dirty. I used Stu's technique and hired a truck mount extractor company to work with me for half a day for $300. Floor came very nice. Some of the big holes remained a little dark but I ended up filling them in when I did the grout repair. Customer was very happy.
Some before and after pics


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<image1.png><image1.png>
Sent from my iPhone

> On Apr 22, 2015, at 1:20 PM, John Freitag <jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com> wrote:
>
> We can first with a good alkaline cleaner and brush then mix oxi-clean and
> hot water mix the oxi-clean 2 to 3 scoops per 5 gallon of water, allow to
> dwell then scrub and vac. It you have mold then use a bleach solution.
>
>
> John E Freitag
>
> John E Freitag
> Owner/Director
> The Stone & Tile School
> Office 407-567-7680
> Cell 407-615-0134
>
>
>
>
> www.thestoneandtileschool.com
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: list-manager@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com
> [mailto:list-manager@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com] On Behalf Of Stuart
> Young
> Sent: Tuesday, April 21, 2015 6:39 PM
> To: Stone and Tile PROS Technical Support
> Subject: Soil in pits.
>
> Does anyone have a method for removing the soil in the pits of travertine,
> and porcelain made to look like travertine?
>
> Stuart
> Santa Fe Floor Care
>> On Apr 21, 2015, at 5:26 PM, Stuart Young wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> <photo.JPG>
>>
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>
>
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--
Regards,
Stu Rosen
201-446-1200
"EVERYTHING MATTERS"


 
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Regards,
Stu Rosen
201-446-1200
"EVERYTHING MATTERS"


 
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