Has anyone tried this stuff? as on T me. Xerapol Scratch Remover. It's supposed to remove scratches from arcyilic glass and plastics.
Has anyone tried this stuff? as on T me. Xerapol Scratch Remover. It's supposed to remove scratches from arcyilic glass and plastics.
" Rule books are for the Guidance of the Wise, and the Obedience of Fools"
wonder if it does work this good or is there more to the obvious cut in the video than time saving, and how much rubbing does it take?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...&v=ibzgMAxOYaA
Looks good!
And it gets heaps of praise from the MC retailers etc-
http://www.xerapol.de/english/tests.htm
....and its only $20 delivered.
http://www.automazing.co.nz/xerapol-box/
might have to grab some and tst it on my visor and screen
When Life thows me a curve
...I lean into it!
Either Plexus or Pledge is not too bad at the visor treatment - certainly improved my older visors...
Pledge is lots cheaper than Plexus but the one I have smells like a tart's window box so I stick with the Plexus. For now. When it runs out I'll have to use up the pledge and just hope I don't get stopped by any pansy copper who wants me to blow his "breathalyser"...![]()
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
I assume it works the same for visors as it does on ipod screens, I once had a Nano with a really scuffed screen (almost unable to see the display) read about "Applesauce" screen scratch remover and then read that it was essentially just Brasso. Bought a can of brasso and used it to make the screen like new, also works great on phone screens etc, just need to use a little elbow grease. I intend to try it on my visor when/if it ever gets scratched enough.
YMMV
There are two types of people in the world: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data sets
Toothpaste is a good mild abrasive that works well on plastics.
Or you could try sperm, if it does not work at least it felt good getting it out of the 'tube'.
I learned about uses for Brasso about 38 years ago when I was working at an electrical appliance shop part time while still at school. Great for turning yellowed fridge and stove enamel paint back into white. Also for the old perspex turntable covers etc. It really does work for those sorts of applications. But not for optical use.
I recently tried brasso on scratched sun glasses and a visor and achieved similar results to that which is likely to be achieved using that Xerapol Scratch Remover. Especially seeing him use sand paper to sand back the perspex/acrylic around scratches. It won't be any good for visors if you have to rub in the same spot for more than a minute or so as it wears down the surface of the perspex/acrylic (fine for non optical purposes) and effectively causes a very minor localised reduction in thickness which results in distorted vision as your focus passes across the effected area. anything more than minimal use will render your visor unusable, so you can rule out recovery of visors with anything more than super light scuffing. Even then it is still noticeable. The other thing is that it removes surface coatings such as is used on sunglasses to filter sunlight, anti fogging etc.
My 2 cents
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