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  • Stove Cleaner?

    I'm planning on going out to my mom's house in a few weeks and clean her kitchen up for her, since she's busy working and remodeling a room, and since my step-dad is a lazy fucker.

    What's the simplest/most effective way to clean the stovetop drip pans and coils? I want to shy away from steel wool, because I don't want to scratch the hell out of her stove.

    What chemicles/methods can you folks suggest to make this a one afternoon project and not a multi-day process?
    "We, the people, are the rightful masters of both congress and the courts - not to overthrow the constitution, but to overthrow men who pervert the constitution." Abraham Lincoln

  • #2
    409

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    • #3
      Sodium hydroxide

      Sent from my SPH-M900 using Tapatalk
      2015 F250 Platinum

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      • #4
        Scrub off what you can from the coils with a scotch brite pad and a degreaser (409, etc). Once they appear dry, turn on low for a while to make sure they're dry then crank those bitches up to high and cook off anything that's left. Turn off the burners when done and go buy new drip pans. Screw cleaning them.

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        • #5
          Use a magic eraser!

          Lyn

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