Welcome, BirdBrain!BirdBrain said:For hazy glasses, try the Tang. You could also add vinegar to the rinse cycle.
Look at your ingredient label on the Cascade (Formulations will vary from place to place) If it lists Silicates (usually Sodium) that is the source of the hard to remove haze on glasssware. Calcium water spots are usually controlled by the rinse aid and just about any acid (citric in kool-aid,tang or acetic in vinegar will remove calcium also. The silicate is added to protect the washing machine from corrision. It leaves a thin almost transparent film on metals that will resist most water born corrosion. Glass is also a silicate and it will build up on that. No reasonable amount of acid will remove silicate or that haze. Soaking in a basic material will slowly remove it Washing (not baking) Soda is safe but slow. Lye is faster but not really safe around the house. DO NOT USE SALT it will pit metal and even stainless steel resulting in pinholes that are impossible to repair. The chloride inpurities in chlorine bleach can have the same effect but most bleaches are very low in chloride inpurities because the bleach makers are well aware of the effect and they have filling machines with metal parts.Wifezilla said:I am so glad it worked for you and about hubby. Are our husbands related???
I have tossed salt in the dish washer. It helps. I still have to use expensive dish washer stuff (Cascade complete Gel) or the glasses are hazy...but salt and/or vinegar does improve things. Use whatever is cheaper.