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<DIV>I agree that customer should be told of the chips caused by the
technician...replacing the ivories would be a mistake though as matching to the
original is nearly impossible...acrylikey just fixes the chip!</DIV>
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<DIV>David I.</DIV>
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<DIV><BR><FONT face=Arial size=2>*********** REPLY SEPARATOR
***********<BR><BR>On 10/25/01 at 7:45 AM Clyde Hollinger wrote:</FONT></DIV>
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style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid">Mike,
<P>I have some thoughts although I have never used AcryliKey. I am
looking at this from the client's point of view. If the repair isn't
truly invisible, I would get a little upset to have a technician return keys
to me that had obviously been repaired or didn't match each other. Also,
since this will be your first try, will your results be as good as those done
by someone experienced?
<P>Regards, <BR>Clyde
<P>Mike and Jane Spalding wrote:
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<FONT size=-1>List,</FONT> <FONT size=-1>Does anyone have any
experience with "AcryliKey II" ? You know, advertizes in the Journal
"repair chipped ivory in 20 minutes". I had a small "oops" with a set
of keys in my shop for re-bushing, managed to drop some on the concrete,now
I have a dozen heads to repair or replace. Many are still firmly
attached, with small but noticeable chips on the front corners. Seems
a shame to remove and replace these if they can be repaired. Is this
AcryliKey worth trying?</FONT> <FONT size=-1>thanks in
advance,</FONT> <FONT size=-1>Mike Spalding</FONT> <FONT
size=-1>PS could also use a source for ivory keytops.</FONT></BLOCKQUOTE><FONT
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