First, get the paint off of the frame. It is chrome under that spring green. Then, silicone spray is your friend. Put the rubber in the frame, spray the slot with silicone and slide in the glass.
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First, get the paint off of the frame. It is chrome under that spring green. Then, silicone spray is your friend. Put the rubber in the frame, spray the slot with silicone and slide in the glass.
I gotta say, there is zero evidence of chrome being under the paint. There are rusty spots, and a few scratches, but nothing shiny and bright. Even inside the frame is spring green.
I’ve tried soap & water, WD-40, white lithium, and silicone spray...
I’m curious if you went to an ‘Auto glass’ shop, or just a glass shop?I did mine a few years ago BUT my home attempt was going like yours. I finally gave in and took mine to a glass shop. They have plenty of equipment for working with these issues. Also , it was not a lot of cash.
I’m curious if you went to an ‘Auto glass’ shop, or just a glass shop?
Maybe it doesn’t matter....
I am leaning toward this route.
Thanks! I’ll look into it.The glass shop I went to does both automotive and residential/commercial. It is called National Glass.
Back a "few" decades ago, I restored Tri-Five Chevys.. One of the "fun jobs" was to replace ALL the door & vent glass w-stripping with new.. The problem with the "new" w-stripping is, most of the time, it's too damn thick.. One "trick" an old glass fitter showed me was to use Windex.. Yup, the glass cleaning soap.. The Up-Side is, it make the glass "slick enough" to slide into the w-strip and that slide into the chrome channel.. NOW the DownSide!! The Windex makes EVERYTHING so slick that the expensive (new, restoration glass) gets so slick it CAN (and does) end-up on the concrete floor of the shop!! In a LOT of pieces!! Vinyl/Rubber gloves "help".. some! YMMV!!Ive searched for the last couple of days for a tech thread on this particular subject but could not find anything specific. This was my disclaimer for those jumping to the "use the search function"!
Now, Is there a science to the install of this weather strip piece that goes in between the glass and the frame of the wing window for my 1972 forty'.
It almost appears as though the frame needs to be slightly pryed open before sliding the glass in with the w/s on it, and I know the ever so slight pry of this frame will without doubt damage it, so prying would not be an option. i cant for the life of me figure this outAlso when the w/s is installed on the glass, it buckles out at corners causing almost bulge this i thought i would cut a slit to make it fit. Before I try a forceful install does anyone have any pointers tricks or suggestions.
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Back a "few" decades ago, I restored Tri-Five Chevys.. One of the "fun jobs" was to replace ALL the door & vent glass w-stripping with new.. The problem with the "new" w-stripping is, most of the time, it's too damn thick.. One "trick" an old glass fitter showed me was to use Windex.. Yup, the glass cleaning soap.. The Up-Side is, it make the glass "slick enough" to slide into the w-strip and that slide into the chrome channel.. NOW the DownSide!! The Windex makes EVERYTHING so slick that the expensive (new, restoration glass) gets so slick it CAN (and does) end-up on the concrete floor of the shop!! In a LOT of pieces!! Vinyl/Rubber gloves "help".. some! YMMV!!
Charles 1974 FJ40.