Glazing itself has no effect on the print life.
However, if you have seen print glazing drums at community darkrooms or colleges then you would know why.
The linen blanket used to keep the print in contact with the glazing surface is usually a disgusting colour of brown fixer stains - if you have never seen one then think spilled coca cola.
Too many people fail to wash their prints properly and over time some of the fix from each print has accumulated in the linen blanket.
The old fix can then dissolve in the water from your wet print and contaminate your carefully washed master piece.
Thats why glazing is considered non archival by some - too many contaminated prints
If you own our own glazing machine - hot bed or drum - and keep everything very clean then it shouldn't be a problem
Martin
To cure this, I wonder if the linen blanket can be removed and laundered, run it through a cycle with soap and bleach (the laundry kind), and then a second time through the machine with out soap (or bleach) should freshen that blanket up nicely. Put it back on the glazing machine wet, and fire up the machine to dry it out to a nice ironed like state.
As for community/collage darkrooms, it might be just as simple, they get a second blanket for the glazer, and once a week or so, they switch the blankets and get the one that was on the machine laundered.....

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