Part of many of my recent projects has been to remove the scratches on plastic parts - sometimes on the underside of suspension arms, but often on the underside of the chassis tub, where use has inevitably left any number of gouges. It’s not just me being cheap – sometime replacements aren’t readily available, and even where they are, unless a tub is really badly broken, I think retaining original parts is important. I’ve always used wet & dry paper, starting with a very aggressive grit & working to a fine finish, but in the past I’ve used various 1:1 car products to get the final shine – Autogylm Original Colour Restorer, Autoglym Super Resin Polish, and Bilt Hamber Auto-Balm Wax ... but ever since Edou mentioned the 3-bottle Novus plastic polishing set, I’ve been itching to give that a try. I spent around 90 minutes going through a number of grades of wet & dry paper, then the 3 Novus polishes, and I have to say I was impressed with the result. What follows is mostly pictures of the results after each step – apologies for the poor quality of some of the images – and for not finding a better background for the reflection shots than a streaky vertical blind.

 

This is the underside of the chassis tub from my recent Manta Ray acquisition – it is pretty rough, but eminently restorable.

jr_plastic_001

 

The same tub after a few minutes work with 60 grit wet n dry paper, used wet with a little washing up detergent, and wrapped around a small wooden block:

jr_plastic_002

 

Ditto for 120 grit paper:

jr_plastic_003

 

And 240 grit ...

jr_plastic_004

 

400 grit ...

jr_plastic_005

 

And 1200 grit:

jr_plastic_006

 

On to the Novus polishes – the three bottles are:

  • #3 – Heavy Scratch Remover
  • #2 – Fine Scratch Remover
  • #1 – Plastic Clean & Shine

jr_plastic_007

 

After using the “Heavy” polish:

jr_plastic_008 jr_plastic_009

 

... the “Light”:

jr_plastic_010 jr_plastic_011

 

... And the final “Shine”:

jr_plastic_012 jr_plastic_013

 

I think that came out quite well – though I have managed to also “polish” off the raised rings around the two screw holes at the very front of the chassis ... and part of my fingerprints.

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Written by TB member Jonny Retro

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