Became aware of this via a pop-up social media ad. Looks like it’s basically a two-step process, first steaming, then polishing the glass with a rotary cloth thing.
Also, it’s 300 bucks, 500 for the “pro“ version, no idea what the difference is. They also sell replacement brushes (implying that the brushes have a finite use), and “polishing gloves,” which just seems weird.
A search of the Board turned up nothing, but wondering if anyone else has seen this or tried it. Cleaning glassware is a topic that comes up regularly here, after all.
Seen the ad. No chance I’m buying
First time I have seen one of these was yesterday, in a Zakin Wines Instagram post. Jan Zakin was using the 360 degree brush on some wine glasses and, while it looked effective, I question whether it’s worth the cost.
Anyone try one of these?
Looks intriguing, but curious how it does with very thin glasses like grassl.
It’s not cheap, but is cheaper than the industrial equivalent. And onsale for Christmas.
Good build quality?
I do just fine with a clean kitchen towel for under $10. No way am I interested in this white elephant.
Watched the video–looked like a great way to break Zaltos.
Agreed. That’s why I was asking if anyone used one. There’s another video using thin glasses…I’m mostly Grassl which are very thin and fragile.
However, these work great (if expensive)
“The Clear360, brought to you by the makers of Zaltos.”
I was at a friends who had one of those commercial ones. It was amazing and I wanted to buy one until I saw how expensive it was before going back to my towel.
Hahahaha–that is brilliant! ![]()
Yes.
We have one at our local wine club. It’s awesome. But I don’t need industrial strength at home.
Clear360 looks interesting for the price, if it hold up and doesn’t break glasses.