Smashed Front End - Latch your Hood ?
Smashed Front End - Latch your Hood ?
Thank goodness for insurance ! ? Apparently, the hood latch did something and my hood went flying up and smashed my window, bent my hood, hood hinges, "flared my fenders", dented my cowl, and some miscellaneous stuff to include cracking my crack free dash. This may end up totaling O'le Bestsy, but this is a comprehensive claim and not collision. I got a total lecture on insurance last night where the two young ladies on the phone basically told me that if I had collision (this was not a collision claim), I would get about $1,600 for the car and the insurance company would take my car. Nice. Sounds like America.
Any ideas of the best windshiled glass? Can this be removed at some future day if I go with eventually scraping the old girl? I have a totally rust free 300D 1985 which needs a total renovation, EG soda blasting, paint job, et cet. Any thoughts from the forum?
I was in the middle of a half dozen major projects / modifications, and now this. What the @#$%^$%^% ????
I had the EXACT thing happen just before I left for the European Road Trip! Plus a broken headlamp! Finding these two beauties is what kept me from changing the rear seal on the tranny - I had to forfeit changing that - thinking it doesnt leak much...
It cost about $70 for a new windshield (including mounting it) and I got a SH headlamp. I still have the small dents, but oh well!
I'd say go with fixing it - you can prolly scrap a good windshield, and fix the dents.
Wow, Sorry that had to happen. Another fella had that happen in another forum. That's like the 2nd one to happened within the month or so.
Those windshields are easy to remove. Cut the seal and it pops out. You can get a cheap one the next time you go out to your local wrecking yard.
Have a glass company install it or you can attempt it by using the rope in the seal trick.
I'd try to save it if you can instead of junk her.
.
(10-22-2011, 11:25 AM)Greazzer I got a total lecture on insurance last night where the two young ladies on the phone basically told me that if I had collision (this was not a collision claim), I would get about $1,600 for the car and the insurance company would take my car. Nice. Sounds like America
(10-22-2011, 11:25 AM)Greazzer I got a total lecture on insurance last night where the two young ladies on the phone basically told me that if I had collision (this was not a collision claim), I would get about $1,600 for the car and the insurance company would take my car. Nice. Sounds like America
I have complete covereage EXCEPT Collision. That goodness this was not a collision. My car cannot collide with itself. So, yes Comprehensive Insurance coverage will cover this. Got to this point after 10 minutes of discussions with the insurance ladies.
What's the scoop on removing your own windshield. Cut what ? More details please or info. I already did a little research and the young ladies who ganged up on me are apparently wrong about the insurance company taking my car. They were wrong about the glass -- South Carolina law clearly states ZERO deductible, AND I think a "totaled-car" title has certain caps on them. However, comprehensive is different than collision so I think they cannot even total the car.
Very depressed over this right now. I thought I was going to get a bunch of projects done this month too .....WTF ?
Cut the rubber gasket with a utility knife. Like holding it perpendicular to the plane of the glass.
Getting the new one in I have heard of using soapy water and something like a wire or guitar string to help. I've done a rear window for a truck but never a windshield.
No need to cut anything! Remove the windshield chrome stripes - there's two L-shaped pieces on the left and right bottom part - carefully take those off. There's a top middle connecting part, slide it over to the left or right. Just pull off the chrome parts.
Then using a screwdriver pop off the windshield (apply screwdriver in between car and rubber seal, gently, starting from one place and slowly moving further.
To put back, use a string - like others have suggested.
It's pretty easy - you just have to be carefull when installing the new one so as not to crack it.
Get a replacement windshield from a junkyard...
(10-23-2011, 07:27 AM)vstef_is No need to cut anything! Remove the windshield chrome stripes - there's two L-shaped pieces on the left and right bottom part - carefully take those off. There's a top middle connecting part, slide it over to the left or right. Just pull off the chrome parts.
Then using a screwdriver pop off the windshield (apply screwdriver in between car and rubber seal, gently, starting from one place and slowly moving further.
To put back, use a string - like others have suggested.
It's pretty easy - you just have to be carefull when installing the new one so as not to crack it.
Get a replacement windshield from a junkyard...
(10-23-2011, 07:27 AM)vstef_is No need to cut anything! Remove the windshield chrome stripes - there's two L-shaped pieces on the left and right bottom part - carefully take those off. There's a top middle connecting part, slide it over to the left or right. Just pull off the chrome parts.
Then using a screwdriver pop off the windshield (apply screwdriver in between car and rubber seal, gently, starting from one place and slowly moving further.
To put back, use a string - like others have suggested.
It's pretty easy - you just have to be carefull when installing the new one so as not to crack it.
Get a replacement windshield from a junkyard...
X2 on those chrome pieces, they are needed to compress the gasket and make a seal and they dent with a harsh look. I got one from a used parts guy for 80 bucks or something like that, put it in with a helper in about an hour start to finish. To get the old one out I sat in the car and pushed out with my legs while the helper pulled the lip of the gasket back. Worked great (till my foot popped through once, like that scene from pineapple express lol)
You can do it don't worry. How bad are the fenders? They were by far the hardest part of my project. You've got me paranoid, I checked my hood every time I got in the car yesterday
When you put it back in
MAKE SURE you have all of the trim back in the gasket first. Then put a string all the way around the window overlapping a little at the bottom have some one put pressure on the windshield and slowly pull the string all the way around from the inside of the car you can pull on each end of the string a little at a time and the gasket pops around the metal I have found slapping on the glass sidewase from the out side near where you are working helps seat the rubber more
It takes less time than reading this article
I have put the trim pieces AFTER I had the glass and rubber seal perfectly in. I just put some grease on the trim pieces (where they enter the gasket) and neatly "hammered" them down with a rubber hammer and wooden piece.
I suggest cutting seal because it's the safest way to remove the window without prying and accidently cracking it. Those seals are most likely 25 plus years old. So it's probably at the end of it's life anyways and a new seal is a better route to go without the use of additional Butyl Window Sealer.
You can install the window with the chrome molding in place or without. It's one's own preference. But the FSM states to keep the molding in place while installing the windshield, not installing it after the windshield is set.
.
I got $2k for my 300D when someone rear ended me, and I kept it!