lay a piece of PETG (maybe polish up the surface of the petg with some car wax) across the flat portion. tape it into place. put the acrylic up on it's edge with the repair facing up and fill it with a non-yellowing epoxy. after cured, sand and buff it out. it won't be PERFECT. but you will have to know to look for it to find it.
Will do. I was sawing like a maniac that day and never noticed the chipped edge until the job was back on the table.Turn down the speed a little .on the track saw and that helps cutting acrylic.
I was going to say bondo, but for a quicker fix some good old cyanoacrylate will build pretty fast and sand out fine. Only if you're painting it obviously.I ended up fixing this chipped edge with Bondo. After it was painted you couldn't even see the patch.
Track saw is fine, blade should be carbide triple chip with as many teeth as you can find. Can be pricey but worth it. If you can trim it and it still be size needed for job I would.I used a track saw with whatever blade came with it. Usually it does a good job cutting acrylic, but it's possible I pushed it too fast.
By buzz trim I just meant cutting enough off that edge to clear the chip. Might be easier than fussing with trying to patch it.