


To finish up after everything I buff it with an extremely small amount of liquid wax. Whatever you do don't be frugal with the spray! Better to use more than needed than not enough. Then I clean and buff as it says and if it needs more I do it again. I do not wait for it to make 2 evolutions before spraying again, I usually let it go around 3-4x this way depending on how scratched it is. If it gets even a little dry it will make the disk hazy with the sanding, if it's kept really wet it works great! I spray heavily before starting then keep spraying the top as it comes around to go down again. I don't like how little spray they include but any spray made for cleaning eyeglasses (the kind thats safe for plastic lens') works just as well. The wetter the better! Thats where I deviated from the directions, they say to "spray lightly then let it make 2 evolutions around then take it out and wipe then buff" I started by experimenting on a couple of disks that I knew were not fixable because the backs of the disks were scratched as bad as the front.

This one is even better because I am hands free so it can keep going while I spray it to keep it wet. I decided to invest in this one as we have a couple hundred, more or less, kids movies. I figured if it could help even just 3-4 movies that would have otherwise needed to just be replaced then it was worth it, it worked great after I got the hang of how to use it and I deviat ed from the directions a little. I started with the hand cranked version as it was cheaper and I was skeptical after reading all of the reviews. Now I love the thing and I'm glad I took the time to tinker with it like I did. Did this thing do what I wanted it to? Yes, afte r I used my homemade liquids Again, it barely cleaned any disc let alone repair the disc when it came outta the box. I also found a way to plug this thing into the wall and make it go way faster (which is fine if you manually rotate the disx when preparing. And the second mix was really just windex and warm water. The first includes the same wax youd buff your car's paint with. Then I used a home mix recipe for a "first pass" liquid to be used, followed by a "second pass" concoction. I threw out the stupid liquid first of all. HOWEVER, I have found a simple and inexpensive way to make this thing do what I need it to do.

I mean, even the the ir branded 'magical repair tincture tonic super spraying nice-nice" fluid is a joke because it's all water.! (okay-not ALL, but only like ~.001% is actually anything other than h20: a tiny smidge of what they put in window cleaner.wow). I know disc repair items always have a vast array of buyers saying "it's horrible! contrasted by an equal number saying, "worked fine for me." Let's call this product what it is: a slapped-together nearly worthless product that embodies only the most basic disc repair technology.
