Scratched discs - what do to?


I can't be the only person with this problem. My new GamuT CD-1 is wonderful, etc. (see my system), but it is sensitive to scratched discs. Email from the designer indicates that he decided on sound quality at the expense of robust correction (which, I guess isn't 'correction' so much as 'guessing').

Unfortunately, I have a good number of old discs that have been around the block a time or two--lent to friends who leave them out and stack them, caseless; carried around NYC in sub-par cd wallets (mea culpa); dropped, forgotten, lied to...

How can I fix them? I have heard of a number of products--potions, polishers, scrapers...

The following is a purely ad-hoc list of possible solutions. Can anyone comment? I'd love to just buy one that works instead of building a library of products that don't.

Novus #1 Plastic Cleaner
Novus #2 Fine Scratch Remover
Novus Perspex polish
Allsop cleaners ?
Brasso polish ?
Discwasher CD scratch repair kit (cleaner and polisher liquids)
Discwasher CD Cleaning system (turntable thingy)
BlueNote Galaktos CD treatment
Nitty Gritty Pure CD Fluid
Auric Illuminator kit - gell and pen (does this fix scratched discs?)
Mapleshade Mikro-Smooth polish
Mapleshade Optrix (enhancer?)
Finyl cd cleaner
Disc Doctor - Miracle CD Cleaner
Walker Vivid Cleaner kit (marketed as an enhancer, not a scratch remover.)

I'm leaning toward the Mapleshade combo--they seem to have good feedback on their website (not surprisingly), and the products seem fairly priced. Anyone here used it? (Anyone used their Maple platforms?)

Thanks. I will report results back here.

Regards,
Chris
cyounkman

Showing 1 response by mutahman

Chris,

I have had varying results with products such as Novus and Magners. May be worth checking into but I wouldn't have high hopes. I have a friend who (compared to me) is a whiz with this type of stuff and he "polished" some of my damaged discs with an abrasive compound. It worked ok but as I watched the process I realized there was a lot of room for error. I learned the hard way that taking care of my discs was something I really had to pay attention to cause I was starting to have too many discs that skipped or locked up simply because I was not taking care of them. I was leaving them loose on the jewel case (not locked down which lead to them scraping over the center "wheel" in the jewel case), lending them to friends (which I have just about banned) and worst of all using cd wallets for portable storage (not to point the finger but Case Logic should cut me a check for about $300 for the discs I've damaged in their wallets).

Today I do 2 things to protect my collection. (1) is I make high-speed copies of the discs I am most worried about damaging. From what I can tell I am not losing much (if anything) when burning the discs on my high speed burner (2) About 2 weeks ago I found a storage case that I really am very impressed with and you may want to check it out (it won't help the discs that are already scratched but could save you future headaches). If you go to www.slappa.com you'll see they have a new line of cases that are great for storing and protecting discs. I ordered a couple just to check them out and was very impressed with the quality to the point where I am going to migrate my entire collection over to these cases. They have a couple of nifty features that make them very good for home storage.
fyi--I don't work with these guys or have personal ties with them.

Good luck--this is not an easy problem to fix going "backwards"

SC