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You can purchase a vinyl repair kit to remove the scratches. You can also use silicone to fill in the scratch, and buff it out.
You can use a variety of polishing compounds to buff out minor, small, and surface scratches in chrome. Just google "Chrome Polishing" or "Chrome Scratch Removal" and you'll get a ton of links. Sold at most hardware and tool stores are polishing compounds in little tubes. The ones you'll want are "White" -fine compound, and "Pink" Jeweler's Rouge. Now, that being said, if the scratches are deep, you're out of luck. If they are surface scratches, you can remove them with a lot of elbow grease and the above compounds or a rotary cloth wheel hooked up to a drill or grinder and the compounds above. Be careful, as Chrome is measured at the micron layer in thickness, so cutting thru it is fatal. If still not sure, go ask a Harley rider.
you dont
If you have a buffer polish laying around, put this on a soft cloth and gently buff the scratch out of the wheels. Do this all the way around the wheel and it'll be gone!
No. You can get a store to buff the disks to minimize the scratches. If they are deep scratches though, it will not work.
a buffer In most cases if you can feel the scratch with your finger nail, it's to deep to buff out.
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Yes, you can buff the surface of a disc with toothpaste to remove, or lessen, scratches.
I'm not aware and couldn't find a rub-on type product that can remove scratches from chrome wheels. Your best bet is probably to have the wheels buffed out. Scratches in chrome cannot be rubbed out for the most part. Very minor scratches can be buffed on a wheel with special compountd but only if they are light surface scratches. To keep chrome clean and protected, we recomend a non-abrasive polymer/wax. For more info, please call chromeplating.com at (888) 327-4189.
They remove scratches off a car by first trying to buff them out. If that does not work, the scratches are sanded, they are then filled with filler, and sanded again. Next a primer is put over the scratches, and then paint to match the rest of the car.
A fine grit sandpaper may buff scratches out, or maybe polishing compound. There really is no way to get rid of scratches in plastic, just cover them up.
It is impossible to completely remove scratches from a CD. Many commercial products to remove scratches exist, but they can often exacerbate the problem. You can "buff" out scratches by rubbing a small amount of fluoride toothpaste on it in a circular pattern.