Title : How to Professionally Repair DVDs Without Spending $500
Author : Alan McCloskey
Date : Sunday, May 20, 2007


Are CD repair kits worth the money?

If you are a technology junkie then you no doubt have thousands of commercial CDs or DVDs, not to mention thousands more of your own archives. Even if you take care of your collection like a scientific laboratory, you are bound to scratch some of these discs. Replacing these discs may be very expensive (if not irreplaceable), so a good disc repair kit what every modern household needs.

While the methods in this article have worked well in testing, I cannot guarantee you will achieve the same results. Anything you do to your discs you do so at your own peril.

There are many consumer CD/DVD repair kits out on the market today (Disc Washer, Disc Doctor, Memorex OptiFix Pro, etc), and they are all pretty much the same devices. Whether electronic or hand-cranked, these devices consist of a mechanical spindle and two buffing/cleaning pads. So what makes an expensive one worth the extra money? I've used several that work decently, and others that don't seem to help at all. The commercial disc cleaner at my neighborhood GameStop returns discs to a like-new finish in just a few minutes, but professional units like this cost over $500.

The only real difference are the compounds used in these consumer devices. Some only require water, but that's because the chemicals are embedded within the pads themselves. Some compounds perform better than others, but how do you know which one to use, or which kit is the best?

Any of these CD repair kits can perform on a professional level if you have the right compound, so if you don't have one, go out and buy a $20 motorized CD repair kit (go ahead and spend the extra $5 on an electronic one, your cranking arm with thank you).

Some kits perform better than others, but none of them have returned my discs back to their original scratchless state. It can be debated how one kit works better over another kit, or one kit is the best buy for the money... but we're trying to reach scratchless perfection, not a slightly improved scratch. It doesn't matter which consumer kit you buy, because only an expensive professional disc repair kit is intended to completely remove all scratches.

I've tested several household rubbing compounds, from toothpaste and automotive rubbing compound to Acetone and abrasive bathroom cleaners. Let me tell you right now.. Acetone will melt your disc, so don't even try it. Many of these performed as well as (and in some cases better) than the rubbing compounds included with these consumer kits, but there's one rubbing compound that was head-and-shoulders above all of them. This secret ingredient is...

Continued on next page...  

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