- Feb 10, 2000
- 30,029
- 67
- 91
Just a handy tip for all of you:
I just bought a used software title on Ebay, only to find it was badly scratched. I had pretty much given up when it would not install from my DVD or CD-RW drives. I did a bit of research on this subject and found this page - a bottle of Brasso metal polish and a whopping 20 seconds of elbow grease got the CD working perfectly.
Basically you just take a few drops of Brasso and rub it into the scratched area using a clean, soft cloth (I used an old all-cotton T-shirt), perpendicular to the laser's path, until the underlying scratch is gone (it should not be more than ten seconds), then wash off the residue with some liquid detergent and rinse and dry it. This is SO easy, and it should restore any CD, CD-ROM, or DVD that is not scratched down to the metal. I have also heard of people doing this with toothpaste, but that is a bit more of a brute force technique - it is less effective and far likelier to ruin the disk.
I just bought a used software title on Ebay, only to find it was badly scratched. I had pretty much given up when it would not install from my DVD or CD-RW drives. I did a bit of research on this subject and found this page - a bottle of Brasso metal polish and a whopping 20 seconds of elbow grease got the CD working perfectly.
Basically you just take a few drops of Brasso and rub it into the scratched area using a clean, soft cloth (I used an old all-cotton T-shirt), perpendicular to the laser's path, until the underlying scratch is gone (it should not be more than ten seconds), then wash off the residue with some liquid detergent and rinse and dry it. This is SO easy, and it should restore any CD, CD-ROM, or DVD that is not scratched down to the metal. I have also heard of people doing this with toothpaste, but that is a bit more of a brute force technique - it is less effective and far likelier to ruin the disk.
