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Thread: How do you repair a high gloss scratch?

  1. #1

    Default How do you repair a high gloss scratch?

    Question for anyone handy -

    I have a Michael Dixon humi (second most love of my life). Damn cat put a little scratch in it - on the lid, which only I can see. It's coated in a polyester high gloss. Any ideas on how to seal it/fix it? Called a violin & piano shop - it'd cost me a LOT to repair it.

    Much appreciated.

  2. #2

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    This may sound weird but ya might want to call a boat shop. They might be able to tell ya how to wet sand a small scratch out or rubbing compound. Just a guess but may be worth a call.
    Family, Friends and a good cigar. Oh and some fishing too!

  3. #3

    Default

    Here's my opinion. I've done this with a coffee table but never a humidor. The coffee table was a little less refined than your average humidor but it should work fine.

    If you really want to make it look like new is get a couple of sheets of really fine sand paper. Get some paper, starting at around 400 grit wet/dry, but do it dry, and slowly sand the entire top, brining the total top layer down to the bottom of the scratch. Then clean with a tack cloth, then to the entire top again with 600 grit wet/dry. Do it dry again, if you do it wet the water could seep into the lower layers of poly.
    This time remove any particles with a compressed air, you can get a can of it at a computer store for cleaning keyboards and such, then get use a real high quality poly, make sure when you buy it you tell them it's for furniture and not floors and put on a layer, let dry for however many hours the can says and assess. Most likely you should hit it with another coat, but don’t sand it this time.


    Edit - I search and found a place to order the 600 3M paper, I didn't look but they probably have the 400 also.

    http://hobbypeople.net/gallery/507467.asp
    Last edited by nhcigarfan; 02-24-2006 at 01:42 PM. Reason: found the paper I used

  4. #4
    Join Date
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    Binghamton, NY
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    This is gonna sound kinda crazy....... Olive Oil..... I have hard wood floors, the guy who did my floors told me that if I got a small scratch in the floor, take a small drop of Olive Oil and coat the scratch with it.... wipe off the excess...... works all the time on my floors for small scratches, I don't know if it will work with the humi...... good luck !!
    I'm not big on doing reviews, tobacco doesn't taste like "cocoa" or "nutty" or "mocha" to me, it tastes like freakin' TOBACCO. I know what I like and I really don't care what other people think of other cigars. I've never read a review and said to myself "Wow, that sounds like a cigar I'd like to try!"

  5. #5

    Default

    Thanks everyone for your advice. Greatly appreciate it. Tried the olive oil - and you know what - I can't see it anymore. I can still feel it so sooner or later I might do the sanding/coating - but I'm satisfied for now.

    Cheers and thanks again.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Binghamton, NY
    Posts
    1,271

    Default

    I'm not big on doing reviews, tobacco doesn't taste like "cocoa" or "nutty" or "mocha" to me, it tastes like freakin' TOBACCO. I know what I like and I really don't care what other people think of other cigars. I've never read a review and said to myself "Wow, that sounds like a cigar I'd like to try!"

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Granger, Indiana
    Posts
    1,393

    Default

    The only way to permanently remove it, leaving it like new, is the sand, clean, and finish job. A fair amount of work and if you are that concerned with results, I'd let a professional shop do it. But why bother with this much work for a scratch? Wood furniture will eventually get scratched. There's just no avoiding it. Accept it, polish it, and smoke a cigar.

    Polishing compounds are your best and easiest bet to hide the scratch.

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kenyth
    The only way to permanently remove it, leaving it like new, is the sand, clean, and finish job. A fair amount of work and if you are that concerned with results, I'd let a professional shop do it. But why bother with this much work for a scratch? Wood furniture will eventually get scratched. There's just no avoiding it. Accept it, polish it, and smoke a cigar.

    Polishing compounds are your best and easiest bet to hide the scratch.

    Yep, over the weekend my son got mad and threw a die-cast match box car across the room, it skip across the top of the sofa table, scratched it, and into the side of my desk top and took a little chunk out and left a scratch.

    Screw it. I not not fixing it. I have two more boys coming, they're due in about 2 months so that means basically everything I own is screwed.

    BJ's wholesale had a nice 120 qt. cooler. I'm upgrading.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by nhcigarfan
    Yep, over the weekend my son got mad and threw a die-cast match box car across the room, it skip across the top of the sofa table, scratched it, and into the side of my desk top and took a little chunk out and left a scratch.

    Screw it. I not not fixing it. I have two more boys coming, they're due in about 2 months so that means basically everything I own is screwed.

    BJ's wholesale had a nice 120 qt. cooler. I'm upgrading.
    Nice... actually, for all my non-gloss wood furniture , I purchased those wood markers at Bed Bath & Beyond. Amazing how it makes it look like it almost-didn't-have-an-accident.

    Congrats on the twins! Condolences on the furniture!

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