You can remove all, or a majority of it, by placing an ice cube on the wax, then chipping it off the wax as it hardens from the ice.
To remove candle wax from a hardwood floor use an ice cube to harden the wax and then gently scrap off the wax with a putty knife. To remove the wax finish on a hardwood floor use mineral spirits on the floor. Use a cloth and apply the mineral spirits in a circular motion until all the wax has been removed.
Try a floor wax and buff it out.
I don't know why gin stains vinyl tile, but we've found that Magic Eraser does the job of removing it. However, it leaves a dull spot, so you need to apply some floor wax after removing the stain.
yes it will yes it will
If it really is wax, you will not remove it as it will have slowly been absorbed deep into the wood. The deeper you get into the wood, the less there will be but you would need to remove a lot of wood to get the floor free of wax. The easiet way to refresh the surface of any wooden floor is to use a floor sander - hire one from a tool-hire shop.
The carbon tetra chloride removes only organic material from cloths as Grease, Wax, oils, tar and hydrocarbons.
use a blow dyryer and a wet cloth
Best way to clean hardwood floors is with a damp mop. Before mopping, make sure that you have removed all surface dust from the floor. To remove wax you should consider buffing out old wax and resurfacing the floor. Heat and scrape. I would recommend being careful. Damaging your hardwood floor could cost a lot of money to repair in the long run
Because home made floor wax is higher quality.
Almost all vinyl today is "no wax" vinyl. You never want to apply wax to this type of floor. Check with the manufacture or retailer you purchased it from. In the rare and strange event you have a floor requiring wax, you would use a stripper to remove any residue on the surface.
There is no reason to wax a tile floor.
Vinyl is the only "no wax" floor I am aware of and removing the wax should not damage the vinyl finish. You can get removal products at most flooring stores that are specifically designed for this purpose. I took the "no wax" wax off my "no wax" floor and it looked better than ever.