Your Questions, Answered

  • We use a data-driven measurement process. If a scratch is deep enough to catch a fingernail, it requires a multi-stage grinding and polishing sequence. We monitor glass thickness throughout the process to ensure we never cross the "point of no return" that leads to permanent optical distortion.

  • Absolutely. We specialize in the luxury residential market across the Florida Gulf Coast. Our "Clean-Site" protocol is specifically designed for high-end interiors, ensuring that your home remains pristine while we restore the visual integrity of floor-to-ceiling architectural glass. homeowners and commercial builders on large-scale projects

  • Every project is handled by our core team—Barry, Skyeler, or Stanton. We are clean-cut, articulate professionals who are fully vetted and background-checked. We respect your property and maintain a clean job site from start to finish

  • Yes. Restoration typically costs about 25% of the price of replacement. Beyond the cost savings, it avoids the logistical nightmare of removing large, heavy impact-glass panes from high-rise structures, which can often lead to further property damage or structural seal issues.

  • Yes. Florida’s climate and irrigation systems often lead to heavy mineral buildup. We utilize professional-grade polishing compounds to clear the glass without the use of harsh acids that can damage surrounding frames or seals.

  • This is a common concern. Technically, the manufacturer’s warranty was already compromised the moment the glass was scratched by a third party (construction crews, improper cleaning, or pets).

    However, we have a unique advantage: we have worked directly inside window manufacturing facilities performing factory-level glass restoration. While a front-office employee at a window company might give a generic "no" over the phone, the reality is that our precision process restores the glass to its original visual integrity. Replacing a high-rise impact pane is often a massive liability; restoration is frequently the solution that builders and manufacturers secretly prefer because it maintains the structural seal of the original installation.

  • No. Under the ASTM C1036 standard, glass manufacturers are permitted a thickness variation of up to .004" within any one-foot area. Most scratches we encounter are less than .001" deep—well within the allowable factory tolerances.

    For exceptionally deep damage, we utilize precision depth-gauging tools before we begin. This allows us to establish a "Go/No-Go" threshold, ensuring we never compromise the safety or structural rating of the pane.

  • No. On modern double-pane and impact-resistant windows, the Low-E (low-emissivity) coating is located on "Surface 2"—which is the inward-facing side of the exterior pane, sealed safely inside the argon-filled space between the glass. Because the coating is protected between the panes, our restoration process on the outer surfaces cannot touch, scratch, or thin the energy-efficient layer. Your window’s thermal performance and UV protection remain 100% intact.

  • No. Contrary to popular belief, the "fingernail test" is not an accurate depth gauge. We successfully remove scratches that catch a nail every single day. Often, what you are feeling is the width or the jagged edge of the scratch rather than its actual depth. We use professional measuring tools to determine the true depth; as long as the damage is within the allowable tolerances of the glass, we can restore it to a factory-clear finish.

  • Scientific consensus is that glass is an amorphous solid, not a liquid. The "wavy" look of antique windows isn't caused by glass flowing downward over centuries—that’s a common misconception.

    Historically, window glass was made by glassblowers who spun and stretched molten glass into large discs. This process naturally created variations in thickness. A trained glazier would always install the thicker edge at the bottom for structural stability—much like the Pyramids have a wider base for a reason! Unless you heat glass to thousands of degrees, it remains a solid.