Jkay Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 I discovered this for myself a week ago and it works nicely on my Clark's ...
Utheman Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Nope. I've only used Polywatch. Thanks for the heads up.
Jkay Posted December 27, 2011 Author Report Posted December 27, 2011 Lol leave it to tapatalk to post the tiniest photo possible. That's like a postage stamp. You only get two options. 28kb microfilm size or 5mb world map size. 1
sanro Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 I have used both Polywatch and CapeCod. Both work fine, but CapeCod works faster so that is the one I use now. Probably, however, CapeCod is a little more "harsh" on the plexi so I would imagine it wears it more than the more subtle Polywatch. Results are similarly good, though.
torobravo Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 I use for plexi and stainless steel too, it works for minor scratches perfectly
mikellem Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Toro, good to see you posting again.. MM
Ronin Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Yep, and Cape Cod also works great for scratched (Netflix) DVD's or CD's.
Jkay Posted December 27, 2011 Author Report Posted December 27, 2011 Yep, and Cape Cod also works great for scratched (Netflix) DVD's or CD's. Ohhh! Great tip. Here's a better image ... DAILY WEAR plexi!! Repolished to perfection ...
krpster Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Good tip. Never would have ventured to try it for fear of causing damage. Gonna give it a try on a some of my vintage pieces. Thanks.
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