Yes, you can buff the surface of a disc with toothpaste to remove, or lessen, scratches.
No. You can get a store to buff the disks to minimize the scratches. If they are deep scratches though, it will not work.
Put toothpaste on it it may work for minor scratches but im trying it now and i gonna check if it works if not take it to a repair disc shop
Breath on it and rub it on your shirt, if that doesnt work try cleaning it with a wet substance and rub it with a soft material. If that doesnt work, take it to a gamestore and have the scratches buffed out of it.
You can't; they're for video games only.
Most times it does not work
Yes, you can buff the surface of a disc with toothpaste to remove, or lessen, scratches.
If you want to get a video game to work, try lightly rubbing toothpaste on it. This will fill in the scratches. From there, gently wipe the toothpaste off with a damp rag, let it sit and dry, then try it again.
For lightly scratches sometimes either Colgate Toothpaste, Or any brand of peanut butter will work.
use rubbing achohol and clean the scratches
There is no best plain toothpaste that is good is get rid of scratches; any brand will work.
No. You can get a store to buff the disks to minimize the scratches. If they are deep scratches though, it will not work.
Toothpaste may help reduce the appearance of minor scratches on plastic surfaces due to its mild abrasive properties and you may try gentle rubbing to see if it helps buff out the scratches. However, it may not completely remove deeper or more severe scratches.
It depends. Check if the disks have scratches or smudges. I have some used games from Amazon and they work just like my new games.
They design video games...
Yes game or gamestation should have a disc repairing machine to remove most or all scratches from your discs, i got my oblivion and my fallout 3's scratches removed the other day for 2 quid each and they now work perfectly.
Put toothpaste on it it may work for minor scratches but im trying it now and i gonna check if it works if not take it to a repair disc shop