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Have you actually used one?
I know how to get rid of scratches.
I know you like glass better than acrylic. I even know about toothpaste, mayo, and pole-barn-stove ash. My question is: Has anyone actually used one of the scratch removal kits for an acrylic aquarium? What kind, and did it work? How long did it take (what size aquarium and how much did you do)? How difficult was it? How were the results? Was it worth it? Mine is currently empty and I am planning to fix some damage around the bottom by (you guessed it) coralline algae. THanks - P. Salad |
Have you actually used one?
IMHO, i fyour intent on trying to get rid of any scratches, skip all
the home brew crap like mayo and wood ash etc etc, and buy a MIcro Mesh polishing kit. It all depends on how deep scrates are and how many so giving a length of time would be hard to do.. I used to do a ot of acrylic repair on aircraft with real kits and its still not a 15 or 30 minute job, neither is it an hours job........it can take many hours of rubbing and rubbing....Its not hard, its just very time consuming......Yes they work if you use the proper abrasives in the manner directed, skipping a grade here and there just sets you back with much more rubbing. Its also possible if its done wrong, or the scratches were deep to create an area that is distorted, due to changing the thickness and inducing radius and edges, so distortion is also a possibility........You wll pay a lot more money for a "aquarium Scratch remover" kit than you will by buying a decent scratch removal kit like MIcro Mesh........ On 6 Mar 2006 17:50:15 -0800, "P. Salad" wrote: I know how to get rid of scratches. I know you like glass better than acrylic. I even know about toothpaste, mayo, and pole-barn-stove ash. My question is: Has anyone actually used one of the scratch removal kits for an acrylic aquarium? What kind, and did it work? How long did it take (what size aquarium and how much did you do)? How difficult was it? How were the results? Was it worth it? Mine is currently empty and I am planning to fix some damage around the bottom by (you guessed it) coralline algae. THanks - P. Salad -- \\\|/// ( @ @ ) -----------oOOo(_)oOOo--------------- oooO ---------( )----Oooo---------------- \ ( ( ) \_) ) / (_/ The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates.... |
Have you actually used one?
George,
I was lazy an used a compound tapplastics.com (they are local to me, so I just picked up a 4-compound kit) sells on hand drill. It was OK for microscratshes, but deeper ones it didn't do much good, and using a drill makes distortion more likely than a flat sanding pad. Regards Yuriy |
Have you actually used one?
Croosh wrote:
It was OK for microscratshes, but deeper ones it didn't do much good, and using a drill makes distortion more likely than a flat sanding pad. Long ago, I worked as a silversmith. When polishing out scratches, we found that using a buffing wheel in the same direction as the scratch would deepen the scratch; the compound just ate the scratch out deeper. Eventually it would polish out, but you took off a lot of surrounding material. Orienting the whhel at 90 degrees to scratches polished the scratches out with less material loss. We got the best results by using a rag to remove polishing compound from the scratches every minute or two. I suppose it would be the same in this situation. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
Have you actually used one?
IIRC the mmicro mesh as well as what i read on acrulic repairs while
in the USAF, stated to go across the scratches at a 90 deg angle, and then at a 45 etc etc, and not to work the repair all in the same direction, but keep varying the abrasives angles over the deeper scratches, until its all blended in. On Fri, 10 Mar 2006 03:24:05 GMT, George Patterson wrote: Croosh wrote: It was OK for microscratshes, but deeper ones it didn't do much good, and using a drill makes distortion more likely than a flat sanding pad. Long ago, I worked as a silversmith. When polishing out scratches, we found that using a buffing wheel in the same direction as the scratch would deepen the scratch; the compound just ate the scratch out deeper. Eventually it would polish out, but you took off a lot of surrounding material. Orienting the whhel at 90 degrees to scratches polished the scratches out with less material loss. We got the best results by using a rag to remove polishing compound from the scratches every minute or two. I suppose it would be the same in this situation. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. -- \\\|/// ( @ @ ) -----------oOOo(_)oOOo--------------- oooO ---------( )----Oooo---------------- \ ( ( ) \_) ) / (_/ The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates.... |
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