Anyone living in Sussex, preferably near Brighton or Haywards Heath, I'd be really grateful for recommendations of Autoglass people in the area. I want to find someone to put my windscreen back in the van for me.
wibble
Last edited by wibble_puppy on Tue May 27, 2008 12:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
thanks, 8009steve I did know that, but I gathered that some companies are better than others, and that it was a good idea therefore to get personal recommendations from peeps in my area
Ah! You just failed to take one step backwards, MoG! Let's make a date for you to come and supervise me doing it
thing is, though, I gather it is a bit easy to screw it up and end up with a leaky windscreen and water in your boots. that's why I thought maybe be really kind and let a pro do it for me
Never done a Minor screen, but done 6 or 7 Mini screens, in and out, several on my own.
Quite scary because of how much lean you need to put on the glass, and how much bend too !
Blag someone from here or your local club that has done a couple and do it together.
With 2 or 3 people ( someone who has done it before), some suitable thin rope, a collection of plastic tools and some washing up liquid for lube it's not too stressful. And you know how to do it next time ! (sounds kinky)
[img]http://www.spagweb.com/v8mini/images/spag_avatar1.gif[/img] Ian (Spag)
www.spagweb.com - www.v8mini.co.uk - "The Roughest V8Mini Deathtrap In The World"
did that include the rubber
if so not bad, if not then a bit heavy
it may be cheaper, pro rata to have the windscreen supplied and fitted as most companys make there money on the parts
Really - it's v easy to fit a Minor screen - much easier than a Mini screen. But - ONLY if it's not a laminated screen ! You will almost certainly crack a lammy screen. Use a new rubber - and have the rubber nice and warm and pliable - in direct hot sun is good. And DO NOT use washing upliquid as a lubricant - it's full of salt. I've never used the 'string' method - just fit rubber to car then plonk the screen into the lower half of the rubber - and work your way round side by side bit by bit easing the rubber lip over the glass whilepressing the glass down into the cavity. The hardest part is fitting the filler strip neatly so the join is exactly at the top.