Someone actually made a RetroBright product, I guess it was inevitable

reallyrandy

Tinkerer
Oct 30, 2021
177
81
28
New Jersey

71y5QebqtrL._AC_UL348_SR348,348_.jpg
 

mac27

Tinkerer
Apr 30, 2024
45
40
18
Virginia, USA
www.mac27.net
Yeah, this stuff has been around for a while (there are reviews on the Amazon listing going back to at least 2021). Seems to be effective based on what many of them say.
 

reallyrandy

Tinkerer
Oct 30, 2021
177
81
28
New Jersey
I've had fantastic results from plain old peroxide and water at a tenth of the price. It kinda seems like preying on folks who don't know that... like many other products.
 

Trash80toG4

Active Tinkerer
Apr 1, 2022
905
256
63
Bermuda Triangle, NC USA
No doubt there, good results have been achieved with all kinds of crazy concoctions/methods . . . given enough experimentation.
No fuss/no muss has a quality all its own. ;)

Hopefully this is the original formulation? It's branded with the trademarked name. ISTR RetroBrite was originally developed by materials science types with plastics expertise?
 

Byte Knight

Tinkerer
Oct 21, 2021
96
75
18
Yes, Retro-Brite has been around for quite a while. It used to come in a plastic can that you would brush on. I got some of the new stuff and dumped it in the old can and brushed it on as I'm a little skeptical that the spray would give a uniform result. Brushing works great if you put on frequent coats perpendicular to the previous coat in order to avoid streaking. One day in the sun and you've got a new-looking computer - it's my goto retrobriting method!