m_shoe_maker wrote:Port and Polish not recommended.
m_shoe_maker wrote:Port and Polish not recommended.
michael corleone wrote:m_shoe_maker wrote:Port and Polish not recommended.
Stroker kit, twin side, lightened flywheel ok lang
flavi1967 wrote:Here's a question, people keep asking me if the life of a cd shortens if you polish or use a machine to remove the scratches? so that i won't do that if it does. let me know
egay wrote:flavi1967 wrote:Here's a question, people keep asking me if the life of a cd shortens if you polish or use a machine to remove the scratches? so that i won't do that if it does. let me know
DEFINITELY.
The disc is provided with a protective coating and that would thin-out as you polish.
I know there are players that are very sensitive to disc scratches but I wouldn;t go as far as polish the discs - sayang.
Follow Trauma's suggestion nalang.
.e.
qguy wrote:if you polish a CD it would extend the life of the CD since it would remove the scratches from an otherwise useless scatched CD. diba ?
IF I am not mistaken the protective layer is on top and not at the bottom where the scratches are normally are.
TAS wrote:why would you polish the label side (varnish side) in the first place?
the scratches you want to remove is on the readable side.
egay wrote:While Polishing may remove the scratches from the varnish layer,.....
TAS wrote:egay wrote:While Polishing may remove the scratches from the varnish layer,.....
egay wrote:
Still polishing the plastic-side will make reading more difficult in the long term.
There is a tendency to make that part "cloudy".
qguy wrote:To add Cleaning is different from Polishing, when you use cleaning agents, your removing the dirt AND at the same time creating micro scratches that makes the CD cloudy.
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