best methods for repairing CD/DVD scratches?

bolomite

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2000
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I'd rather not spend $10 - $15 for some 1 oz. bottle of resurfacing liquid/polish or whatever. Any budget methods that are also effective?
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
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brasso, or whatever silverware/brass polish they have at the store. lots of elbo grease.
 

LordRaiden

Banned
Dec 10, 2002
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I've heard peanut butter works good for filling in scratches on cd's and dvd's. Can't verify that this works, but that's what several people have told me.
 

bolomite

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2000
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Originally posted by: LordRaiden
I've heard peanut butter works good for filling in scratches on cd's and dvd's. Can't verify that this works, but that's what several people have told me.


:confused:
 

LordRaiden

Banned
Dec 10, 2002
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Originally posted by: Sid59
i've had good luck with toothpaste.
I can believe it. :) I believe the idea behind the suggestions I've seen so far is using something like a paste that fills in the scratches without blocking the laser from seeing the film underneith. Usually what I do with a seriously scratched disk is I use something like clone CD to pull a good copy of it, then store that away just in case, make another copy that I can beat up and kill if need be while putting the scratched cd away in a safe place.
 

Shawn

Lifer
Apr 20, 2003
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Originally posted by: LordRaiden
Originally posted by: Sid59
i've had good luck with toothpaste.
I can believe it. :) I believe the idea behind the suggestions I've seen so far is using something like a paste that fills in the scratches without blocking the laser from seeing the film underneith. Usually what I do with a seriously scratched disk is I use something like clone CD to pull a good copy of it, then store that away just in case, make another copy that I can beat up and kill if need be while putting the scratched cd away in a safe place.

But how can clone cd make a good copy if it cannot read from the cd?
 

Triumph

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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Honestly, I've been able to fix skips in most of my CD's by simply washing them with warm water and some liquid soap. Usually they're just dirty from too much handling, or there's something sticking to the surface.
 

Joyride

Golden Member
Apr 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: Triumph
Honestly, I've been able to fix skips in most of my CD's by simply washing them with warm water and some liquid soap. Usually they're just dirty from too much handling, or there's something sticking to the surface.

But that still doesn't save you from the scratches
 

Triumph

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,031
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Originally posted by: Joyride
Originally posted by: Triumph
Honestly, I've been able to fix skips in most of my CD's by simply washing them with warm water and some liquid soap. Usually they're just dirty from too much handling, or there's something sticking to the surface.

But that still doesn't save you from the scratches

No, but I'd say that a majority of my skips weren't from a scratch at all, which may be the same problem the original poster has. No reason to go through the hassle of removing scratches if they aren't there in the first place.