jayjacque;30292 wrote:What'd I miss? Didn't check the board for a couple days and whoah look what happens!
Ok on the subject of to drill or not to drill. I've tried going off drilling, but there is one common type of repair that always seems to need it, that's those batwings that are located deep enough that they won't fill or only half fill unless drilled or at least popped. And I get a lot of them. Do you non-drillers pop those or claim that they just fill given extra time?
I don't drill and I don't pop, and yes, I'm saying that even those with batwings fill completely. As I have stated before, the extra time is very minimal, usually 5 minutes or less.
I'm blown away by this tread! I knew that some people drilled, but I had no idea that so many did, including some Delta Kits customers which bothers me more than anything else. I can't speak for anyone else, but I can say that beyond the shadow of a doubt Delta Kits users do not need to drill except in rare instances (less than 1% of the time). Some have stated that they don't "need" to drill, but simply choose to, but it sounds to me like many of you need to drill in order to get the break to fill properly in a reasonable period of time, especially on tight breaks. Depending on the system you use, that should not be the case.
So what is a reasonable amount of time? Rather than put a time limit on a windshield repair job I will work on a break until I believe it is filled properly. Admittedly I spend more time than some, but I can generally complete a repair in less than 20 minutes, very rarely take more than 1/2 hour, and in some cases finish in less than 15 minutes. To those of you that put a 10 or 15 minute time limit on your repairs I suppose my times are unexceptable, but it doesn't sound like my times are that much different than most of the drillers.
So if I can fill the repair in the same amount of time, and get the same or better quality without drilling, why would I "choose" to drill. Even if you claim your drilled repairs look just as good as non-drilled repairs, there is still an expense involved. I just don't get it. However, I do sell burs, so please don't let me discourage any of you drillers from continuing to use your current method of repairing windshields.
I had planned to quit posting on this thread, but the word "claim" got my intention. I don't claim that I drill less than 100 repairs, including tight stars, bat wings, etc., that is an undeniable fact. We often have very tight star breaks to work on in our training classes and even our first time students can fill them without drilling. It's not big deal.
We have taught the no drilling technique for at least 10 years now, and have found very few technicians who cannot master it. I will say however, that experienced technicians have hardest time with it as they try to apply their own techniques to our system. I've tried my techniques with dozens of other systems, and it just doesn't work, can't or won't make the change.
I also understand that some people are very happy drilling every repair, and therefore see no reason to change. That's OK with me too, I just don't like the fact that some people are taught that drilling is necessary, especially when it is presented that way on the windshield repair forum.
Drilling is an alternate method that some prefer. I will probably never understand the reasoning behind that, but I can accept it as long as the drillers can accept the fact that not drilling is also an alternate method. Which method is better will have to be left up to the individual technician, and of course those who supply their equipment, and those who supply their training.