Rub the surface down with emery cloth and water. This should give you a smooth surface to work on.
you can just fix it up with some tools trust me
The inner keeper wife fix the last supper but she did not know. Because Matthew paid the inner keeper.
replace rotors, or on some newer gm's it might be bad ft. hub from abs
have your brake rotors turned on a lathe, or replace them with new ones.
Bad synchronizer. Internal transmission repair required to fix.
A violin shop repairs a scratch by mixing up some varnish of similar material and color. It is covered and filled until flush with clear varnish.
They are made by a company called MINX.
Nail polish remover is actually made up of organic solvent and added scents. Furniture varnish is composed of a hardening oil, which is soluble in the solvents used in nail polish remover. So the mark you've made is actually a place where you've removed the varnish, so the only way to fix it is to find a matching varnish and re-varnish the patch.
Usually, some varnish and finishing stain will fix scratches and nicks in a wood floor.
jam a coat hangar in it.
You could try sanding the clear coat off where it is pealing then re-coat with new seal coat, I am not sure just how well that would work. Of course the best thing would be to take it to a paint shop and have it professionally repainted. I can tell you from experience that if you do nothing the paint under the seal coat will deteriorate to primer and it will rust through that.
if your shoes are patent (shiny) then a cheap and foolproof resolution is nail varnish . take one of your shoes to your nearest beauty store and match up the best colour to your shoe and one that is hard wearing .then using a piece of sandpaper rub down the scuff to make it smooth and apply the nail varnish sparingly . apply another coat and leave it to dry .then after being left overnight the shoe will look as good as new .
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replace it
I do not
you can't
you can just fix it up with some tools trust me