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WG1 said:Just noticed a scratch on passenger window. Not real obvious unless sun hits it at a certain angle. Is there anything I can do to polish it out a bit? I don't care about removing it completely, just want to make it less noticeable.
David Fermani said:Nope - Nothing you can do. It takes a special machine to *remove scratches* from glass. Check this out:
glass scratch removal
JohnZ3MC said:A little support for the kit from Eastwood. I got the same kit from JC Whitney a couple of years ago and used it on the wife's Camaro windshield. It had nasty scrapes on the driver's side from wiper damage.
The cerium oxide and a power drill and the included mandrell removed the scratches completely without any apparent distortion. I have enough stuff left over to do windshields for the rest of my life too, so the 30 - 35 bucks for the kit amortises well. Cerium oxide is used in the astronomy field to polish telescope lenses so its made for glass so there are no worries in that department.
The only consideration was that it took quite a while to polish out the scratches but it worked and slow progress was noticed.
Get one of those kits, give it a try. If worse comes to worse, you can always get a new windshield as a second option.
-John C.
WG1 said:Thanks, I just ordered the Eastwood kit. Any tips you can give me? How long does it take usually?
JohnZ3MC said:Final tip - don't give up early.
Oops, a real final tip - supposedly the cerium oxide is ever so slightly radioactive, sort of like the glow in the dark watches of years ago, so when you're done, don't store the container in your pocket.
It hasn't hurt any astronomers so far, Carl Sagan is doing just fine.
-John C.
JohnZ3MC said:Use a corded drill, not a rechargeable, the rechargeables don't last long enough.
Make a slurry with the cerium oxide and water and polish with that. Every 5 - 10 min, or when you get bored silly, clean the mess off with a rag and check your progress. At this point you'll notice slight progress at the ends/edges of your work. Add fresh slurry and have another go. Repeat.
It took 45 min - 1.5 hr to do the large arcs on the Camaro.
Feather the work out a bit as you go along, logic says this'll make any 'distortions' disappear. Frankly, I have eyes like a hawk and I couldn't see any distortions at all whenever I drove the Camaro afterwards and I kept looking for optical aberations and just coudn't find any.
Final tip - don't give up early.
Oops, a real final tip - supposedly the cerium oxide is ever so slightly radioactive, sort of like the glow in the dark watches of years ago, so when you're done, don't store the container in your pocket.
It hasn't hurt any astronomers so far, Carl Sagan is doing just fine.
-John C.
JohnZ3MC said:Use a corded drill, not a rechargeable, the rechargeables don't last long enough.
Make a slurry with the cerium oxide and water and polish with that. Every 5 - 10 min, or when you get bored silly, clean the mess off with a rag and check your progress. At this point you'll notice slight progress at the ends/edges of your work. Add fresh slurry and have another go. Repeat.
It took 45 min - 1.5 hr to do the large arcs on the Camaro.
Feather the work out a bit as you go along, logic says this'll make any 'distortions' disappear. Frankly, I have eyes like a hawk and I couldn't see any distortions at all whenever I drove the Camaro afterwards and I kept looking for optical aberations and just coudn't find any.
Final tip - don't give up early.
Oops, a real final tip - supposedly the cerium oxide is ever so slightly radioactive, sort of like the glow in the dark watches of years ago, so when you're done, don't store the container in your pocket.
It hasn't hurt any astronomers so far, Carl Sagan is doing just fine.
-John C.
BigJimZ28 said:sure there is:
Eastwood Company: Auto Tools, Body Repair, Classic Car Restoration, House of Kolor Paint, Powder Coating
but be carefull as you will be removing glass
and if you remove too much it can distort the
optical quality of the glass
percynjpn said:That depends on what you mean by "doing just fine"; as Mr. Sagan passed away over a decade ago, he might see it differently.:think: