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  2. 12 Uses For Windex Beyond Cleaning Your Windows - AOL

    www.aol.com/12-uses-windex-beyond-cleaning...

    It’s been keeping windows sparkling clean since 1936. Windex has a reputation for keeping windows clean, but its cleaning formula has plenty of other uses around the house and garage .

  3. Vinegar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinegar

    Vinegar is known as an effective cleaner of stainless steel and glass. Malt vinegar sprinkled onto crumpled newspaper is a traditional, and still-popular, method of cleaning grease-smeared windows and mirrors in the United Kingdom. [53] Vinegar can be used for polishing copper, brass, bronze or silver.

  4. Is Cleaning Vinegar The Same As White Vinegar? An ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/cleaning-vinegar-same...

    While I know the vinegar to use for cleaning isn’t balsamic, raspberry, or red wine vinegar, I always thought white distilled vinegar (and occasionally apple cider vinegar), was cleaning vinegar ...

  5. 9 Household Items You Should Never Clean With Vinegar

    www.aol.com/9-household-items-never-clean...

    "Cleaning vinegar usually has a higher concentration of acetic acid compared to regular white vinegar." White vinegar contains about 5 to 7 percent acetic acid, while cleaning vinegar has a higher ...

  6. Windex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windex

    Windex's main competitor in the window cleaning market is Glass Plus [citation needed], a glass cleaning product produced by Reckitt Benckiser, which Windex's current owner S. C. Johnson & Son was required to divest to gain the approval of the Federal Trade Commission to acquire Dow Chemical Company's DowBrands consumer products division (the original owner of the Glass Plus brand).

  7. Acetic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetic_acid

    Vinegar is typically no less than 4% acetic acid by mass. [64] [65] [66] Legal limits on acetic acid content vary by jurisdiction. Vinegar is used directly as a condiment, and in the pickling of vegetables and other foods. Table vinegar tends to be more diluted (4% to 8% acetic acid), while commercial food pickling employs solutions that are ...