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Windshield Buffing

19Sprite65

Senior Member
Offline
Has anyone tried the a windshield buffing kit such as Eastwood"s? My winshield has lots of what look like sand pits and somwe very light wiper scrathes.
 
Just pulled mine out of the attic this morning. From what I've read a light stream of water has to be used while buffing, so I need to do this before mounting to the body.
 
PLease post details and links. I've been thinking about this myself.
 
I'll order new seals tomorrow and should have them by Wedneday. Hopefully by then someone might pitch in here w/personal experience.
 
Well, I've done it...and I won't do it again.
Here's the skinny...
When you "buff" it, you accomplish nothing.
To remove even the slightest nick, you must use an
abrasive and actually "grind down" (polish) the glass around
the nick to make it disappear. Doing so changes the optics.
In other words, the glass will look distorted under
certain lighting conditions. Not acceptable.

Here is the test. If you can "catch" the nick or the scratch
with a fingernail, replace it. Period. If you cannot "catch" the
flaw, buff it out.

You can be a LITTLE less picky on the side glass, but be
careful messing with the windshield. I recently "polished"
out some scratches on my one side window, and was unhappy enough
with the results I replaced the glass.

As always, ymmv and I could be wrong.

Paul
 
Thanks Paul, thats what I wanted to hear. Eastwood has the very same warning on their product details. Guess I'll clay bar it and put it on as is and hope to win the lottery some day. I've been working on this car 8 years now;finally finished the painting in August and putting things back on. The inexperienced don't understand that there's so very much to redo ($$$) when reassembling.
 
I buffed out the windshield on my 87 Jaguar, it looked good in the daylight but come night time and oncoming headlights, it was a mess. Then it rained and I replaced the windshield because a buffed glass and rain will distort everything.
If it's a trailer queen, buff it.
If you want to drive it, get new glass.
 
Yup, on the one I did, when water hit it I got
the prettiest rainbow.

Dangerous as heck, but really pretty.

Paul
 
I used Griot's small buffer, glass pads, and glass polish (regular and fine) to clean the water spots off the windshields of our family cars. Worked fine with no distortion. Don't know about nicks and scratches, though.
 
Bil, a product called Bartenders Friend available at any grocery store will remove the water spots with very very little effort.
 
For example, MOSS sells a NEW windsheild for $129.95. Not bad. My Midget has new glass installed by the P.O., looks great.

Not a budget killer, especially if your current one is badly pitted.

FWIW . . .
 
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