Warren Lovell
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In removing the windshield and seal, i found black rtv all around the pinchweld. Is this factory rtv? In watching windshield install videos- I havent seen anyone use rtv. Any thoughts anyone?
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Starting in 1983(I think) it was required for all glass installers to start using urethane to retain the seal and help prevent glass ejection in case of a crash. Any car taken to a glass installer will have urethane used to retain the seal. An at home install isn't required to use urethane, but it is a highly recommended practice.In removing the windshield and seal, i found black rtv all around the pinchweld. Is this factory rtv? In watching windshield install videos- I havent seen anyone use rtv. Any thoughts anyone?
I was assuming he thought it was just black rtv, urethane doesn't dry hard, and remains slightly pliable.If'n I'm not mistaken, the urethane that is used is much stronger stuff than black RTV.
I bet the door failed before it opened.Most definitely. We done a test on a demo derby car one year. I had a door that the latch would not latch on the right rear door. We put a few tubes of urethane caulking in the door jam and some Lords 2 part adhesive. Put the safety chains on the doors. After the derby we tried opening the door and as a back up hooked the strap to the door and ripped the outer skin from the door shell. Where the adhesive was the door would not reopen even with the hinges unbolted. Amazing. We glue panels on vehicles everyday and that is how a lot of he new trucks are built. Makes for a stronger structural strength then bolts alone. Good idea to pull the windshield out of any older vehicle when you are painting it. That pinch weld hides a lot of puss and rust. You are just wasting a lot of time not to remove all the glass on a steel cab.
Now why don’t companies like LMC who put install videos on line use sealant?