A self explanatory tutorial video for how you carefully scrub off peeling anti-reflective coating on a MacBook screen, affected by "Staingate". This video has no talking or voice over, it is just video and soft background music.
Why this works: Baking soda has a hardness of 2.5, meanwhile glass is between 5.5 to 7, so it should not be able to scratch the display. Just make sure you are scrubbing the baking soda into the screen and not your cloth.
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:24 Scrubbing anti-reflective coating
1:16 Cleaning the screen
1:48 Result
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NOTE: This particular video shows a MacBook Pro 13.3" from early 2015.
DISCLAIMER: You void your Apple warranty if you still have it and you do this! This video shows it is possible to use baking soda to get rid of peeling anti-reflective coating on a MacBook screen. But I take no responsibility if you try it and something happens. If you are not very practical you should not attempt this at all.
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A good long while ago I noticed awful staining on my MacBook Pro 13.3" Retina screen. This led me to Google and the term "Staingate". It became clear that I had to get rid of this problem myself. So I scoured the Internet for the best solution ...
Which turned out to be baking soda of all things: You make a paste from baking soda and use it to softly scrub away the peeling anti-reflective coating on the screen.
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