Preferred tool for popping bullseye
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
Nomad,
Excellent and a nice setup you have to attach to the screen as well! It shows that windscreen repair people are handy and creative as well!
Excellent and a nice setup you have to attach to the screen as well! It shows that windscreen repair people are handy and creative as well!
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
why the hell would you want to pop a bullseye? just scurf it and fill it otherwise you will make an ugly mess surely?
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Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
I agree with gduk never popped one cant imagine a reason to do so. Doing more damage isnt condusive to a clean repair take your time and let you injector do its job
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
At the end of a crack I will pop a bullseye to stop it.
Have drilled a hole and after filling it , it ran on me nevertheless !!
That's why !
Have drilled a hole and after filling it , it ran on me nevertheless !!
That's why !
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Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
Sometimes there are breaks such as half moons and horseshoes where the impact point is separated from the break itself. Some times half moons are just about impossible to fill all the way without drilling halfway between the impact and the edge and popping a bullseye.
Cazador has covered long cracks already.
Very small and tight breaks like little crescents can be restructured to be easily filled in a fraction of the time it would normally take. Usually the place where the glass is restructured is not visible after repair because it is so new.
On stars with multiple legs often one will not fill from the impact point. Drilling and tapping off the end of the crack or near the end (or somewhere else) will allow resin to enter.
Drilling a hole near the edge or between lines that won't fill will not make a completely round bullseye. It will make a small crescent under the surface that acts as a small reservoir so the resin can go down and enter the break from the bottom. Drilling just to the inside of a crescent or flies wing makes these into what I call a cats eye. Many times almost instantly fillable. In the case of the half moon, what is being done is to make it into a bullseye. What you can do is make an easy to fill break out of a difficult one.
For those who have good luck not using these methods, well, more power to you. Certainly if it is working for you then don't fix what ain't broke. It's probably better if you can fill without drilling or anything else, and I do this myself. But other times restructuring can make the difference between getting the resin all the way in there and not. At least for me.
I think we should respect other people's methods of doing things, even if they look "not right" to us. I've learned a lot from people that did things in a far different way than I was used to. That's how progress is made and you learn new things.
Cazador has covered long cracks already.
Very small and tight breaks like little crescents can be restructured to be easily filled in a fraction of the time it would normally take. Usually the place where the glass is restructured is not visible after repair because it is so new.
On stars with multiple legs often one will not fill from the impact point. Drilling and tapping off the end of the crack or near the end (or somewhere else) will allow resin to enter.
Drilling a hole near the edge or between lines that won't fill will not make a completely round bullseye. It will make a small crescent under the surface that acts as a small reservoir so the resin can go down and enter the break from the bottom. Drilling just to the inside of a crescent or flies wing makes these into what I call a cats eye. Many times almost instantly fillable. In the case of the half moon, what is being done is to make it into a bullseye. What you can do is make an easy to fill break out of a difficult one.
For those who have good luck not using these methods, well, more power to you. Certainly if it is working for you then don't fix what ain't broke. It's probably better if you can fill without drilling or anything else, and I do this myself. But other times restructuring can make the difference between getting the resin all the way in there and not. At least for me.
I think we should respect other people's methods of doing things, even if they look "not right" to us. I've learned a lot from people that did things in a far different way than I was used to. That's how progress is made and you learn new things.
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
The other day I walked into WalMart and bought me a set of sewing needles for just $ 0.74 ex . In the package are different seizes and thicknisses , for every drilled hole to pop a bullseye you've got your seize , go for it !
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
Why would you need different sizes? Do you use different diameter drill bits?
If so, why?
If so, why?
Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
The package holds 6 different seizes, but I use only the longest and biggest one from the package which fits the drill hole.
The rest of them you may throw away , give them to your second halve, or whatever.
The rest of them you may throw away , give them to your second halve, or whatever.
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Re: Preferred tool for popping bullseye
I have gotten together enough stuff to make a few of these slide hammers for popping bullseyes. If you would like one contact me off forum.
Thanks
Gene
Thanks
Gene
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