What resin to use?
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What resin to use?
It is clear glass use regular resin. The tint is not in the glass. It is in the layer between the two pieces of glass.
Your reply raises an interesting point concerning tinted resins and refractive index, Nelson.
Also the repair approach taken among clear, tinted, and tinted and shaded glass.
Out of curiosity, have you ever tried using green or blue tinted resins in the shaded area?
We have.
Good question, glass tek.
Rather than go on and on covering every base as I am sometimes prone to do, I bow to the forum for what might be an interesting thread as far as repair esthetics in this matter is concerned.
Also the repair approach taken among clear, tinted, and tinted and shaded glass.
Out of curiosity, have you ever tried using green or blue tinted resins in the shaded area?
We have.
Good question, glass tek.
Rather than go on and on covering every base as I am sometimes prone to do, I bow to the forum for what might be an interesting thread as far as repair esthetics in this matter is concerned.
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steering again
It absolutely amazes me that some wsr companies get away with selling tinted resins. What is the real purpose of tinted resin? To sell more bottles of resin, period.
As Nelson stated, the glass is CLEAR. It is NOT tinted. I know I have fixed thousands of cars and I've yet to see a single repair where normal "clear" resin was a problem. I have, however heard of and seen others repair a chip in the tint area with tinted resin... and then the "tinted" area was actually real tint. When it was removed, guess what was left behind? Yep, a nasty dark colored bullseye in an otherwise clear windshield. Pretty funny.
Trust us, throw away the special tinted resin, or ask the people who sold it to you to exchange it for the normal decaf bottles. Sheesh...
As Nelson stated, the glass is CLEAR. It is NOT tinted. I know I have fixed thousands of cars and I've yet to see a single repair where normal "clear" resin was a problem. I have, however heard of and seen others repair a chip in the tint area with tinted resin... and then the "tinted" area was actually real tint. When it was removed, guess what was left behind? Yep, a nasty dark colored bullseye in an otherwise clear windshield. Pretty funny.

Trust us, throw away the special tinted resin, or ask the people who sold it to you to exchange it for the normal decaf bottles. Sheesh...

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