There are several small-ish areas where bits of lacquer came off and a few small scartches.
I was wondering if something could be applied to the scratches and to lacquer edges around bald spots in order to prevent further peeling?
(although i don’t know how lacquer peels — does it start with a small scratch and then peels further around that initial area? Or it comes off in various places due to contact and accidental damage and don’t peel further. Unless more contact/damage in the same area?)
Spot lacquering would be another option (& I’d have to match the color). But is there a way of doing it neatly in diy conditions?
Or best to just leave it be? *****
This is a quote from another thread viewtopic.php?t=33910
(i hope this is ok?)
Would NF-76 Nu Finish or Renaissance Micro-Crystalline Wax Polish be worth trying?
ghmerrill wrote: ↑Sun Dec 10, 2023 8:52 am Have you looked at the Wikipedia page on micro-crystalline waxes? It's really pretty interesting and mentions Renaissance Wax. I particularly like the application of it to hockey sticks -- using the old sticky cloth electrical tape was less than ideal.
Another thing you might look at is Nu Finish. I've used this successfully in a variety of circumstances, though not on bare metal (usually on plastic or lacquer). Its use and effects are somewhat controversial. It's not a wax, not a polish (not abrasive anyway), and it fills micro-pores and defects of the surface. Some people have used it on bare metal.
https://www.amazon.com/Nu-Finish-Liquid ... r=8-2&th=1
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