I'd break it.
I am reminded however of the "speckled axe" story from Ben Franklin's diary. A man brought a pitted axe head into a smith so that it could be ground until the surface was perfect with no pits or rust. The smith obliged the man and asked him to turn the wheel while the smith ground. After some time, the man tired and the smith said "trun on" because there was much more work to be done. The man decided that perfection may be too difficult a chore sometimes and told the smith "a speckled axe is best." So, Franklin offers us a bit of wisdom concerning perfection....