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Natural Science Forum / Physics / Optics / November 2004



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Scratch Removal from TV

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W. Watson - 23 Nov 2004 22:20 GMT
Any suggestions to remove scratches from a TV screen (not the CRT)? A friend must
have transported her TV with the face on something mildly abrasive, and it created a
spot a few inches square on the screen.
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             Wayne T. Watson (Watson Adventures, Prop., Nevada City, CA)
                 (121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N) GMT-8 hr std. time)
                  Obz Site:  39° 15' 7" N, 121° 2' 32" W, 2700 feet
            (Formerly Homo habilis, erectus, heidelbergensis and now sapiens)

                  "I'm not going to die. It would ruin my image."
                      -- Jack La Lanne, 90 year old early TV health
                         & exercise promoter

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Ian Stirling - 25 Nov 2004 15:35 GMT
> Any suggestions to remove scratches from a TV screen (not the CRT)? A friend must
> have transported her TV with the face on something mildly abrasive, and it created a
> spot a few inches square on the screen.

Google for
"glass repair" kit
Brian Blandford - 26 Nov 2004 13:39 GMT
>> Any suggestions to remove scratches from a TV screen (not the CRT)? A
>> friend must
>> have transported her TV with the face on something mildly abrasive, and
>> it created a
>> spot a few inches square on the screen.

For British readers, "Brasso" is a good readily available polish for
acrylic, but not if it is polycarbonate ...

Brian
Joseph Gwinn - 26 Nov 2004 14:44 GMT
> >> Any suggestions to remove scratches from a TV screen (not the CRT)? A
> >> friend must
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> For British readers, "Brasso" is a good readily available polish for
> acrylic, but not if it is polycarbonate ...

I've always used ordinary toothpaste to polish soft plastics.  Usually,
I put the toothpaste on my bare hand and rub away.  The fingerprint or
palmprint holds the toothpaste in place.

Joe Gwinn
 
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