01-28-2019, 06:54 AM
If you have a spray gun:
First, if any of the damage to the headlamp is on the inside of the lens... you're toast. But you'll never now till you fix the outside. The inside damage isn't too common but I do see it. Mostly on the Mitsubishi and Chrysler products.
OEM headlamp lenses are coated with a clear UV resistant topcoat. When the topcoat fails, the sun eats away the poly-carbonate and it oxidize. So to really fix them, you need to sand off the oxidization, sand out the damage to the poly and apply a new topcoat.
First, I clean the lens with a solution of ammonia and water. I use the cheap yellow ammonia. Never use solvents on poly lenses or you'll never get it right. It will soften the lens making it near impossible to sand and it will push the stained yellow mess from sanding into any fissures and you can't get it out.
Then I tape off around the lens to insure I don't scratch the paint with my sand paper. Depending on how deep the damage is dictates which grit I start with. WET-SAND every step. If 600 grit doesn't cut it, I'll go to 400 and if it still doesn't cut it, I'll go to 240 grit. It's rare that I have to use 240.Sometimes I can get away with starting with 600 grit if the lens isn't eaten away too badly. ALWAYS use a sanding block, fingertips aren't flat and you'll only have a few small points of sand paper contact. I use the black side of the Motor-Guard soft block for all my wet-sanding.
Not only are you sanding off the failed topcoat, you are sanding down to the bottom of any pitting in the poly. So I work my way down from the coarse grits to the finer grits. 400-600-800- and then finish off with 1500. I've stopped at 800 before and it will do in a pinch but still doesn't look like a new lens when done. 1000 or 1200 would probably do just fine but I don't stock it.
Then I clean again with the ammonia solution and wash it off with water and a tiny little bit of dish soap, maybe 2 drops of dish soap in a quart of water. Then I rinse it off with clean water.
Once dry, I mask off around the lenses and shoot a 2 part automotive clear-coat over the lens. Looks like new and will last a lifetime. It's a better topcoat than what's applied by the manufacturer.
First, if any of the damage to the headlamp is on the inside of the lens... you're toast. But you'll never now till you fix the outside. The inside damage isn't too common but I do see it. Mostly on the Mitsubishi and Chrysler products.
OEM headlamp lenses are coated with a clear UV resistant topcoat. When the topcoat fails, the sun eats away the poly-carbonate and it oxidize. So to really fix them, you need to sand off the oxidization, sand out the damage to the poly and apply a new topcoat.
First, I clean the lens with a solution of ammonia and water. I use the cheap yellow ammonia. Never use solvents on poly lenses or you'll never get it right. It will soften the lens making it near impossible to sand and it will push the stained yellow mess from sanding into any fissures and you can't get it out.
Then I tape off around the lens to insure I don't scratch the paint with my sand paper. Depending on how deep the damage is dictates which grit I start with. WET-SAND every step. If 600 grit doesn't cut it, I'll go to 400 and if it still doesn't cut it, I'll go to 240 grit. It's rare that I have to use 240.Sometimes I can get away with starting with 600 grit if the lens isn't eaten away too badly. ALWAYS use a sanding block, fingertips aren't flat and you'll only have a few small points of sand paper contact. I use the black side of the Motor-Guard soft block for all my wet-sanding.
Not only are you sanding off the failed topcoat, you are sanding down to the bottom of any pitting in the poly. So I work my way down from the coarse grits to the finer grits. 400-600-800- and then finish off with 1500. I've stopped at 800 before and it will do in a pinch but still doesn't look like a new lens when done. 1000 or 1200 would probably do just fine but I don't stock it.
Then I clean again with the ammonia solution and wash it off with water and a tiny little bit of dish soap, maybe 2 drops of dish soap in a quart of water. Then I rinse it off with clean water.
Once dry, I mask off around the lenses and shoot a 2 part automotive clear-coat over the lens. Looks like new and will last a lifetime. It's a better topcoat than what's applied by the manufacturer.