My laptop screen is scratched
By Julian Prokaza on Thu 04 October 2007
5 Comments
The screen on my IBM Thinkpad X31 has a long scratch (about 20mm) one of its bottom corners. The cause? My cat, pawing the screen to chase the mouse pointer as I was working (okay, playing with the cat). The scratch doesn’t appear to be too deep, but it does distort the display beneath it, although this seems to be as a result of some kind of optical effect rather than more serious damage to the screen itself. A friend suggested using toothpaste to buff out the scratch, much like using T-Cut to repair car bodywork, but I’m sceptical. Have you got any better ideas?
Wendy Baddock, Plymouth
The outermost layer of a laptop's TFT screen is made from plastic, which makes repairing scratches tricky. In theory, your friend's suggestion of using toothpaste is sound: toothpaste is a mild abrasive, which is why it's useful for cleaning the surfaces of our teeth. It's far too abrasive to 'buff out' a scratched plastic surface, though, and the large, uneven particles would turn the scratch into a foggy mess.
You can buy products designed to buff scratches out of plastic. Many users
rate Displex
Display Polish (£3 plus P&P) highly, but you can get the same
results with Brasso.
Just dab a lint-free cloth on the Brasso wadding (don't use the wadding itself!)
and patiently polish out the scratch. Sadly, Displex and Brasso work only on
glossy screens, whereas the Thinkpad X31 has a matte finish. Try polishing it
and you'll make it worse.
The optical effect you've noticed is the result of a change in the screen's
optical qualities. That top layer of plastic is a polarising filter, which means
the light passing through the scratched area isn't polarised. One trick is to
carefully fill the scratch with petroleum jelly (Vaseline,
or similar). Apply it with a cocktail stick and wipe off the excess with a soft
cloth in a swift motion. Petroleum jelly is closer to the refractive index of
the screen than air is, so it often does a good job of making the scratch less
noticeable.
Laptop screen protectors are available (similar to those available for PDAs), but we were unable to find a supplier in the UK. US supplier Nushield will ship to the UK though. Finally, a piece of chamois leather or soft, lint-free cloth cut to fit over the keyboard will protect the screen if the lid gets pressed down while a laptop is in transit.
Solution 1 Polishing
Brasso is a cheap fix for a lightly scratched glossy screen. Dab a soft, lint-free cloth on to the Brasso wadding, then use the cloth to polish the scratched part of the screen. Brasso is abrasive and, with care and patience, will restore the shine to glossy plastic.
Solution 2 Filling
You can't polish out a deep scratch, but you can reduce its visibility by filling it with petroleum jelly. Clean the screen, then use a cocktail stick to fill the scratch with jelly. Wipe off the excess with one swift motion of a lint-free cloth - any other method may wipe jelly over the screen, or out of the scratch.
Solution 3 Prevention
You can protect a laptop screen while the lid is closed by cutting a rectangle of chamois leather or other soft, lint-free material to fit over the keyboard. Leave it in position when you close the lid, and it will protect the screen from marks and scratches from the keyboard and pointing device.
Comments
Same thing happened with mind, just use an optimistically chixi BX11 found in your local electronic stores... intantly remove stratches!
have a similar problem myself, my son drew on my Samsung TFT with a permanent marker and the wife panicked and used the rough green side of a dish sponge to remove it before I got home. It has left a patch of fine scratch marks which I can see enough to annoy me :(
I am tempted to try the Brasso/Displex option but I am not sure if it is a glossy screen or not. It is a Samsung 913N and is definitely not one of the super high glossy screens but having second thoughts about making it worse?
hi i have a dell inspiron 15 and it has a scratch but i don't know if the screen is glossy or not? so can you help me out?
I Have a little scratch on my GLOSSY screen, (Compaq CQ61) it is quite deep, i dont know how it got there. I'm going to try that jelly though
The screen on my IBM Thinkpad X31 has a long scratch (about
20mm) one of its bottom corners. The cause? My cat, pawing the screen to chase
the mouse pointer as I was working (okay, playing with the cat). The scratch
doesn’t appear to be too deep, but it does distort the display beneath it,
although this seems to be as a result of some kind of optical effect rather
than more serious damage to the screen itself. A friend suggested using
toothpaste to buff out the scratch, much like using T-Cut to repair car
bodywork, but I’m sceptical. Have you got any better ideas?
