Star break help

Post your windshield repair tips, questions, advice! Note there is a sub-forum specifically for business development questions.
t4k
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Re: Star break help

Post by t4k »

When heat is applied during the repair, the heat makes the leg or legs appear to be filled. When the repair is allowed to cool the legs magically reappear due to the fact they were never filled. They just closed due to the excessive heat.
TGD

Re: Star break help

Post by TGD »

Just too add, another thing that I noticed is that I been using a resin which is a few years old. Not sure if that effects the appearance of the legs.
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Mr Bill
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Re: Star break help

Post by Mr Bill »

Start at the impact hole and drill sideways toward the leg which will not fill
Pop a bullseye. When you have drilled to the correct depth, the bullseye should occur easily. If not, you are not deep enough.
The bullseye should connect to the unfilled leg.
Next fill as usual.
TGD

Re: Star break help

Post by TGD »

Thanks for all the great advice. Just curious, how often do you guys come across a leg not filling on your repairs?
t4k
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Re: Star break help

Post by t4k »

TGD wrote:Thanks for all the great advice. Just curious, how often do you guys come across a leg not filling on your repairs?
It is extremely rare for me.
Frank EU
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Re: Star break help

Post by Frank EU »

Not often, but it occured yesterday. On a Chevy Impala. One leg just didn't want to fill. As a standard we dry out first to make sure that there's no moisture (we dry out all seasons, even on ''dry'' sunny days). Next, we did all the tricks, heating, flexing etc. We've removed the injector and used the drill (a very, very, rare situation, we normally do not drill) but to no avail. It sucked. We ended deciding to fill the damage, cure it and then drill that one stubborn leg, fill and cure it. It came out perfect (too bad for that drill hole tough).
Frank EU
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Re: Star break help

Post by Frank EU »

BTW: It was a bright sunny day here in Detroit. And yes...we use UV blockers, to eliminate premature curing (another standard step we use, all season, any day.
It may have been a weird form of stress in the windshield that caused the damage to tighten up. Again: it came out good after all. Customer was happy and so were we.
screenman
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Re: Star break help

Post by screenman »

Sometimes you can get what looks like a 1/2 leg only when looking under very close inspection it is a 1/4 inch leg. The next 1/4 is separate but starting so close to the other part it looks as one. -----------
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Something like that but much much closer, even with a magnifying glass it is hard to see.
shepardh1

Re: Star break help HEAT SINK

Post by shepardh1 »

I have never tried a heat sink, do they work well? They don't crack out the star like a piece of snow or ice does?
TGD

Re: Star break help

Post by TGD »

Sometimes the legs look larger to the customer because upon flexing the legs spread a bit. So if one leg can't be filled, it gives the customer the impression that it was better before.
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