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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsFoggy Headlights?
My wife had a parking lot event not long ago. Broke the passenger side headlight assembly.
So, I bought a new one and installed it. (Grrr; stupid engineers)
Anyway, the new one is crystal clear but the old one looked like a bathroom window in comparison.
So, I bought one of the 3M headlight refurbishing kits.
Yep, they work!!!! Just as advertised.
I did the old headlight on her car & both on my car. Wow!
4 step process, which is basically sequential sanding (dry then wet).
Takes 6 or 7 minutes per light.
Admittedly, the driver side on her car is not as crystal clear as the new one, but darned close, with no scratches.
If you have dim headlights at night, I recommend this product highly. All you need is a cheap drill which most folks already have. And, headlights can easily be done while sitting in a lawn chair.
I figured I'd give it a shot and it worked better than I expected and was easier than I thought.
If I'd known, I'd have done it a couple years ago.
gab13by13
(31,757 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,292 posts)Besides, getting that 3" wheel on your eye would be a problem!
Ferrets are Cool
(22,657 posts)Phoenix61
(18,782 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(22,657 posts)It's a conspiracy, I tell ya, a conspiracy.
ProfessorGAC
(76,292 posts)UV light & oxygen (particularly in combination) affects plastic very differently than they do glass.
Also, on more modern cars, there is a very thin coating over the lens, and this an even more susceptible plastic.
Glass absorbs uV, but it's not an organic (carbon containing) material, so the light is merely absorbed & converted to heat.
They could use glass for the headlight lens, but car makers look for every place to reduce unnecessary weight. A pound here, 5# there & the car weighs 2% less which improves mileage. So, plastic headlights are here to stay.
Because of the obvious safety risk of a foggy or distorted, or prone to glare windshield, that's not something they can replace with plastic. So, it stays glass specifically because it won't fog over any reasonable lifetime of a car.
Phoenix61
(18,782 posts)I do mine every couple of months. It works well and is a lot cheaper.
ProfessorGAC
(76,292 posts)I've even read that toothpaste can be used, but as I know toothpaste formulas, I don't know that there is sufficient abrasive in toothpaste.
Rubbing compound makes way more sense.
Do you use a super fine grit?
Phoenix61
(18,782 posts)To me one advantage is it definitely wont hurt the paint job as thats what its intended for.

ProfessorGAC
(76,292 posts)But, there are rubbing compounds with different particle size abrasives.
The 4th step in that kit I bought is, by it's appearance, a paste-like rubbing compound.
Putting some between a finger and thumb, the abrasives feel really tiny.
The kit I bought does use a sandpaper of sorts. 800, 1,200, (dry), 1,800 (wet), and then the paste on a sponge.
The stuff you use is way cheaper than what I bought. I probably should get that and do it more often so I don't need the heavier duty steps.
Now that I know how quick & easy it is, I probably will.
chouchou
(2,985 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(22,657 posts)Maybe a month or two...but real cheap.