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Remove CD Scratches within 10 Seconds..

Remove CD Scratches within 10 Seconds..
This is by far, the most easiest, fastest, cheapest, effective and natural way to remove CD scratches and to polish metals. Too good to be true?, It is also a very ancient technique used to polish metals (circa 1950s) and this secret had been taught to me by my late grandma (about cleaning silverwears).

To start with, you'll need the following materials.

> Heavily unreadable scratched CD's
> Cloth (Any cloth will do, but preferably cotton or the ones used in eye glasses)
> Small Plate
> Ajinomoto or Monosodium glutamate (MSG, used to flavor foods)
> Cooking Pan w/ 1 cup Water and Gas Stove
> Dry Towel
> Water
> Dishwashing Soap
 
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Step 1Pour in the Ajinomoto MSG and water into an empty plate.

Pour in the Ajinomoto MSG and water into an empty plate.
Pour in the MSG and water into the plate, you'll see that I had just a small amount since this stuff can easily scrape off too much plastic.

You can add soap into the mixture, to easily speed up the polishing, since MSG is water soluble, you can have any variations with it.

Adjust it to your desired effect. THE MORE WATER, THE MORE FINE FINISH, THE LESS WATER, THE ROUGHER IT GETS.

Use less water to scrape off deep scratches, then add more water later to a fine finishing.
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30 comments
Jan 26, 2012. 1:49 AMBuskieboy says:
When you "cook" the CD, what temperature do you do it?
Just a bubble or roiling boil or just a simmer?
Mar 26, 2011. 9:07 AMvideogamemaster says:
Yeesh. This stuff is abbrasive enough to buff out a CD, and we EAT it? Thanks alot Japan......
Dec 26, 2010. 12:23 AMeric m says:
boiling doesn't work.

Buy buffer or drill and buy fine grit plastic polish at ACE.

that works.
Sep 23, 2010. 2:25 AMmargie_mack says:
I know dj's also use heat to make scratched cd's work, they heat the cd up on that little light they use to find cd's, just before putting it into the player. A strange method theat really works is also to USE A CONDOM AND RUB IT ON THE SCRATCHED AREA OR ALL OVER AND THEN USE A VERY SOFT FABRIC TO WIPE THE LATEX OFF, WORKS LIKE A BOMB LOL
Sep 11, 2010. 3:36 PMKi1o says:
would it work if i used salt?
Jul 9, 2010. 4:37 PMguitarmonk15 says:
It takes "10 seconds," but you need to cook the cd for 1 minute. Hhhmmmm... Also, I' not sure I want to throw my $200 windows 7 install disk in a frying pan (just wait, someone is going to start an argument about windows vs. mac, or something similar).
Apr 25, 2010. 10:27 PMr.srohan says:
good!!!! but dont know what reaction is going to be happen as i had study chemistry subject 5year ago....................................
 
Dec 28, 2007. 9:33 AMNova_Logic says:
how high does the heat ned to be med high or low?
Feb 9, 2010. 11:46 AMmaxim1982 says:
The boiling temperature should remain constant no matter what setting you put it on. You want it to start boiling sooner - put it in high
May 6, 2008. 3:58 AMDMarie says:
MSG is abrasive enough to resurface CDs??? No wonder it causes health problems for so many people. Yikes. I can't believe we eat that stuff!
Dec 22, 2009. 6:45 AMKev93 says:
MSG is just a sort of salt. All salt is abrasive.
Dec 22, 2009. 6:46 AMKev93 says:
Come to think of it that comment looked mean. It was meant to be nice. Sorry.
Apr 14, 2009. 7:42 AMarirang777 says:
I guess the cooking is to remove totally any impurity from the surface and to make the plastic to soften a bit and probably "fill" or enhance those micro voids and else.

As a bonus, once your CD is back to life again, you can add tomato paste and chicken to the pot and enjoy the very first digital chicken cacciatore! =-)

Thanks for this instructable, supervillain.
Nov 25, 2007. 4:09 PMTop Dog says:
Brasso Metal polish is the best, even better than actual expensive cd cleaners.
Mar 21, 2009. 6:28 PMStew2 says:
I second the Brasso fix, works great! I have also used it on a watch face (Timex Expedition) that was rendered unreadable by blasting with fine abrasive. The Brasso made it look like new! I bet it would even take the scratches out of a cellphones plastic screen though I haven't tried it yet. Plus, I don't keep MSG around, my father is allergic to it.
Mar 20, 2008. 10:09 AMbmschech says:
I tried this. It worked fine, but now the music on the CD's gives me a headache? :)
Feb 1, 2008. 11:44 AMKait999 says:
What ever happened to just rubbing toothpaste on a cd to get the scratches out?, it's a lot simpler, not quite sure if it works as well, but at least it easier.
Nov 17, 2007. 7:40 PMironsmiter says:
ok, so the MSG acts as a varible grit abrasive(by adding water). What does the cooking do? I fear that any heat high enough to surface fuze the CD would also kill the heat sensitive metal coating(MAY work for pressed cd/dvd's but cd/dvd-r/rw's surely die a quick death this way, no? The water would limit the tempature somewhat, to near 200F but still... Andrew_Modder, i think has a slightly better idea... flame polishing plexi/lexan is a time honored method, and as long as you keep your distance, and work in short bits, the heat doesn't spread much past the surface being polished. Someone willing to burn a couple discs, scratch them to hell, and try this? :-)
Jan 31, 2008. 9:01 PMrob2202 says:
ill have to try that
Dec 12, 2007. 6:19 PMbassfly18 says:
haven't done this yet, but to avoid scratches use a spatula or something non scratching to pick up your cd lol.
Nov 30, 2007. 6:22 PMsamson101 says:
does this work with video games?
Nov 25, 2007. 4:11 PMTop Dog says:
Using Brasso is alot easier. Just apply some to a cloth and wipe a couple times over. Inside out, not in circles.
Nov 22, 2007. 9:06 PMdarkmuskrat says:
The cheapest thing to do is to rub a banana on the cd, then wipe it off with the peel. (Clean any leftovers with water and a rag)...It works because of the wax in the Banana.
Nov 17, 2007. 1:43 PMbleachworthy says:
another product I use frequently for cd repair, is McGuire's PlastX. it's a microgrit abrasive, made for acrylic oxidation removal. it takes 30-40 seconds per CD, and takes out any scratch.
Nov 22, 2007. 3:21 PMlaernmoer says:
is it as cheap as MSG?
Nov 22, 2007. 4:34 PMbleachworthy says:
no, I don't think so, it was $5.50 USD for a 10 fl. oz bottle, but it goes a long long way when just resurfacing disks.
Nov 17, 2007. 2:46 PMPunkguyta says:
Where's the dumplings and Almond sui gui soup?
Nov 17, 2007. 9:27 AM!Andrew_Modder! says:
hm really MSG fixes cds? i got to try it out, so far my favorite way iv tryed is melting the cd (mini blow torched for like 1 sec each spot) but it can ruin your cds if you hold it on to long. Well, anyway, ill try it :-)
Nov 17, 2007. 9:59 AMtiuk says:
Same principle really. I've never tried MSG, but assuming it melts/dissolves plastic to some degree it works pretty much the same way.

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