A defect in a lens does not image as a defect but can only effect the resolution, contrast of the lens as each area of the lens has some part in the imageing.
Before doing anything, test the lens.
Anything other than a new element is usually not worth the effort.-Dick
It took me a long time to wrap my head around the fact that "all of the lens" was responsible for "all of the image" in a way that made sense. That's why a "spot" or dust on the lens doesn't show up as a spot on the image. (If you're having trouble with this, think about the fact that closing the aperture to "delete" the edge of the lens reduces the vignetting of a cheap lens, i.e. adding the edges of the lens into the equation causes the edges of the image field to be dimmer in relationship to the center of the image filed. So the outside edges of the lens add more light to the center of the image than to the outside edge of the image circle. Weird, but true.)
That's also why I would theorize, although I'm sure some guy who understands the math of lenses could perhaps confirm or deny, that anything you do that involves changing the refractive index of the lens affects the image. Obviously the scratch has an effect if it can transmit light, specifically it will increase the flare over the entire image field. And I *THINK*, but can't say for sure, that anything you do the lens that transmits light will also have a different refractive index than the glass/air boundary and contribute to flare. Perhaps if the refractive index is close to the glass/air index it may be better than the scratch, but I'd have no way to predict that.
It does seem to me, perhaps incorrectly, that the black paint idea only obliterates that portion of the lens's contribution to the image field and, as such, is like a decrease in aperture diameter rather than a contributor to flare. It's more like a gigantic speck of dust rather than something that transmits light to the "wrong" places because the refraction is wrong.
Is this right? Close but not quite right? Or boy, hello stupid, you missed the boat?
MB