Repair scratched CD toothpaste is great
#21
Posted 19 November 2005 - 07:10 PM
Breathing on a disc deposits halitosis and water (in a small quantity). The amount of water shouldn't do any damage but the halitosis could peel the information layer off. Check first by breathing on wallpaper. If it peels, then use the toothpaste, gel or regular, on your teeth. Then breath on the disk.
DL
#23
Posted 28 November 2005 - 07:09 AM
lol
This post has been edited by gdogg: 28 November 2005 - 07:10 AM
#24
Posted 28 November 2005 - 10:11 AM
If you drink three or four glasses of Absolute vodka BEFORE trying polishing a CD the whatever is in your mouth will be VERY like Alcohol, .....but you would probably lose interest in the actual CD polishing....
jaclaz
[/quote]
I tried this. Well I didnt even care about the cd LOL
This post has been edited by dirtwarrior: 28 November 2005 - 12:03 PM
#25
Posted 29 November 2005 - 10:24 PM
All kidding aside I find that car polish will get the job done so you can make a copy.
If you drink three or four glasses of Absolute vodka BEFORE trying polishing a CD the whatever is in your mouth will be VERY like Alcohol, .....but you would probably lose interest in the actual CD polishing....
jaclaz
[/quote]
I tried this. Well I didnt even care about the cd LOL
[/quote]
LMFAO
#26
Posted 02 December 2005 - 03:20 PM
#27
Posted 14 December 2005 - 10:01 AM
dvdisaster
http://dvdisaster.be...en/index10.html
#28
Posted 14 December 2005 - 11:38 AM
Thanks!
#30
Posted 14 December 2005 - 08:32 PM
#31
Posted 17 December 2005 - 04:01 PM
This post has been edited by bms: 17 December 2005 - 04:01 PM
#33
Posted 20 August 2006 - 12:25 AM
You can use furniture polish to fix scratches in glass, I used it on my glasses. Maybe someone less lazy than me can do a bit of research and see if it will work for discs. If I get time I'll look it up, but there just aren't enough hours in a day
#34
Posted 20 August 2006 - 03:09 AM
DL, on Nov 19 2005, 08:10 PM, said:
Breathing on a disc deposits halitosis and water (in a small quantity). The amount of water shouldn't do any damage but the halitosis could peel the information layer off. Check first by breathing on wallpaper. If it peels, then use the toothpaste, gel or regular, on your teeth. Then breath on the disk.
DL
Ummm... dude? If your breath can peel wallpaper, you've got WAAAAAY bigger problems than a few scratched CDs
#35
Posted 20 August 2006 - 03:49 AM
#36
Posted 20 August 2006 - 07:30 AM
#37
Posted 20 August 2006 - 07:49 AM
dirtwarrior, on Aug 20 2006, 02:30 PM, said:
Actually it is better to always apply polish radially, i.e. at 90 degrees to the "grooves", at least in final steps.
Any mark that is radial or however not tangential to the groove tends to be interpreted correctly by the reader while marks and scratches in the same or near to same direction of th grooves tend to cause mis-readings.
http://www.mcgee-flu.../scratches.html
Quote
A complete guide:
http://en.chinabroad.../271@125577.htm
jaclaz
This post has been edited by jaclaz: 20 August 2006 - 07:52 AM
#38
Posted 20 August 2006 - 10:45 PM
But I got pads in my 360 now
This post has been edited by undeadsoldier: 20 August 2006 - 10:45 PM
#39
Posted 21 August 2006 - 11:54 AM
http://www.modernpla...sticpolish.html
This post has been edited by RJM: 21 August 2006 - 11:56 AM
#40
Posted 02 September 2006 - 04:07 AM
enough of my bablbling, hopefully I'll get more involved with this site again. I think I wore myself out on tearing apart and rebuilding windows software.
Take care everyone



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