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Right, my pug has the original Peugeot abrogate windscreen fitted.
But it also has wiper haze from years of use..
I have used cerium oxide a few times in the past with exceptional results on various windscreens but none of them have had a coating of any kind..
Safe or not or will it take off the coating?
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Not sure, I thought the anti glare coating was bonded between the layers? Might be wrong tho, I'd be surprised if it was on the outer surface with the wipers against it all the time...
(16-05-2016, 10:45 AM)Toms306 Wrote: Oh I don't care about the stripped threads lol, that's easily solved by hammering the bolt in. Nanstone GTD5 GT17S - XUD9TE
Volvo V50 D5 R-Design SE Sport - Daily cruise wagon.
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You should be fine, I don't know the science side of it but I used to use 'Glass medic repair finish polish' at AG which is brutal but works amazingly, used to use it on all sorts without an issue.
The coatings I'm 99.9% sure are on the other piece of glass so the internal side of the car so you've got the outer layer & the laminate to polish through first... Disclaimer: Not my fault if you bugger it up though..
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Jordan...being our detail guru and on this sort of subject...anything to use on lexan?
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(20-12-2016, 12:31 PM)Piggy Wrote: Jordan...being our detail guru and on this sort of subject...anything to use on lexan?
So lexan is a similar material to what a lot of headlights are made from so I imagine the same sort of thing people use on headlights would work well.
Is it scratched or cloudy?
I've heard people in the past say that for the best results you need to sand lexan but I'd be very cautious of it myself.
Personally I'd try the old toothpaste trick, try on an area out the way.. give it a good rub to get some heat generated & then buff to see what difference it's made.. Usually works quite well.
You basically want a very light abrasive substance on it, nothing harsh.
HTH
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Lexan is waaay softer than headlights. Its scratches. Really easily.
A friend used a softheaded window cleaning brush on the rear window without me knowing...scratched to hell.
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(20-12-2016, 01:03 PM)Piggy Wrote: Lexan is waaay softer than headlights. Its scratches. Really easily.
A friend used a softheaded window cleaning brush on the rear window without me knowing...scratched to hell.
Ah I see, I've not had much experience with that sort of thing other than temporarily perspexing minibuses ETC!
I imagine in that case some sort of soft top rear window polish would be ideal. There's a brand called Renovo that do a soft top window polish I believe, may be worth a shot
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try something light like SRP, if it scratched that easily I guess its not one of the scratch or particularly UV resistant types so it'll be pretty soft.
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Thanks chaps...sorry for thread hack... Seemed relevant and saves me doing a seperate thread.
Also curious about polishing windscreens as the 206 screen is looking old from wiper sweep
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Evening mate - did get your FB message but been out on a job all day.
If you have access to a DA, i'd use this and a fine compound with a relatively soft pad combination on a low setting. Anything which isn't too abrasive is what i'd recommend. Most light grade polished would suffice on glass - i've never had issues using "paint" polish on glass if this is what you already have. If not, there're many specific glass polishes out there on the market. Clean my car will stock a load i'd expect.
Keep us posted with how you get on!
Oh and prep the windscreen WELL before you do anything, inclduing the rubber sills as if anything gets caught when polishing, you'll cause more damage than it's worth!
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Nooo don't use a normal pad on the windscreen! Get a Rayon pad if you're going to use a machine polisher, no matter how hot you don't think it is, it'll be too much.
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(21-12-2016, 08:02 AM)hotrodjacko Wrote: Nooo don't use a normal pad on the windscreen! Get a Rayon pad if you're going to use a machine polisher, no matter how hot you don't think it is, it'll be too much.
A normal pad being.....?
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21-12-2016, 08:37 AM
(This post was last modified: 21-12-2016, 08:41 AM by hotrodjacko.)
(21-12-2016, 08:32 AM)ginge191 Wrote: A normal pad being.....?
A foam pad as per normal polishing, well I think they aren't good. My dad thought he could have a go at polishing out a scratch on the windscreen and ended up needing a whole new screen after he f*cked it. To be fair I don't think his technique was up to scratch, but yeah...
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I certainly wouldn't recommend a foam pad on Lexan or anything other than paint & potentially a soft one on glass.
Honestly on Lexan I'd try a soft top window product, a friend of mine recommended something called 'Plexus' and swears by it.
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(21-12-2016, 01:25 PM)1616six Wrote: I certainly wouldn't recommend a foam pad on Lexan or anything other than paint & potentially a soft one on glass.
Honestly on Lexan I'd try a soft top window product, a friend of mine recommended something called 'Plexus' and swears by it.
Silvo worked an absolute wonder on the vitara rear window,
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(21-12-2016, 01:25 PM)1616six Wrote: I certainly wouldn't recommend a foam pad on Lexan or anything other than paint & potentially a soft one on glass.
Honestly on Lexan I'd try a soft top window product, a friend of mine recommended something called 'Plexus' and swears by it.
This man knows. Could also use a mild paint cleaner, when I used to keep Porsche's clean we used Zymol paint cleaner on the rear window screens and used a microfiber cloth to rub it in with a bit of bite. Came up a treat.
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