....anyway - back to glass. Two pieces that were heavily clouded/limescaled when first bought (boot sales) - and which I had assumed would be cleaned without too much trouble, although unfortunately not the case, and both proved difficult. After the recent comments re lemons and citric acid, I filled the Webb's stem vase with neat freshly squeezed juice and left for 24 hours - but no improvement that I cud see. I tried copper balls/aluminium oxide/metal polish, but there's no room in the stem to swing a cat, so no velocity for the balls to reach and very little improvement. Resorted to Dirk's narrow brush on a wire, propelled by a cordless drill, and after lots of patience and cerium oxide/metal polish, reached the improvement you see - about 90% I guess. So, anyone want to buy three cwt. of lemons.

The W/Fs. is obviously the easier piece to get at, although the felt mop on the drill was almost getting me nowhere - so resorted to manual use of a nylon body scrub pad/wire wool - which removed the cloudiness, but left behind the marks typical of wire wool. Used a flexible drive (from a mains drill) with a compressed felt wheel, plus metal polish/cerium oxide, and eventually achieved the result you see. Again, probably something like a 95% success rate (slightly better than the Webb's - I think). I'm in two minds as to whether the nylon pad is damaging - we know the wire wool can be - but I might give more thought to using the nylon pad. If you can get inside the piece, then wire wool is a useful material - provided you accept that time must be spent polishing out the feint abrasive marks afterwards.
Believe both of these pieces had glass sickness rather than simple limescale deposits - but goes to show that with patience even bad pieces can be brought back to a useful life, provide you accept that some examples may require a lot of time spent on them.