Anyone tinted windows themselves???
Discussion
I used some stuff that didnt use glue a year or so ago, had to spray window with a soapy solution and apply just like the glued on stuff. I'd say the 3rd window I did was close to professional, with no bubbles etc, but I probably had a couple of goes at the first window. As there was no glue I could take it off and have another run. It stayed on the car for 18 months till it was sold, Its a bit like putting wallpaper on - the major difficulty I had was access to the windows - i was doing the rear windows in a 3 door!
If you're going to do this then at least make sure that you buy decent quality tint film. All too often the 'home made' tints I've seen have a kind of cheap purply look to the film, as if they've been made out of Quality Street wrappers! If you use the pro film and pro technique then there's no reason why you shouldn't be able to do this yourself. However I've always saved up a bit more and paid a professional to do it for me.
rash_decision said:
I think I'll give it a go! My nephew want the side windows tinted on my Sister's car. It's not a particulalry fancy, and far from expensive car so it's worth a shot! I will buy decent tint though, I'm a great believer in "you get what you pay for!".
I am hoping you mean rear side windows - if its front as well be very careful about the level of tint and falling foul of the Law!I used to do this for a living on conservatories and banks and shops etc, and also bomb proof tinting on various high security places. On a window pane that you can walk up to it's a tricky job to get perfect, on a car it's even harder.
Good luck.
- Make sure the glass is clean - I mean really clean, not just give it a wipe, use a glass scraper.
- Take the glass out/off if you can.
- Don't put the film right to the edges, leave 2mm or so around the outside.
- On really curved glass you'll need to do it in more than one piece, overlap 2 bits and cut over them to get a perfect match.
- Take your time.
- Pay a pro to do it.
Good luck.

.Mark said:
*Don't put the film right to the edges, leave 2mm or so around the outside.
Why? It would be fine on the tail gate but that would look crap on the rear side windows when they are wound down. The guy who tinted my last car was a professional and did car tinting for a living. He put the film right to the edge of the glass (at the top anyway) and finished it off with a file so that the edge PERFECTLY followed the edge of the glass. It looked perfect when the windows were part way down, no s
tty edges etc.mrmr96 said:
.Mark said:
*Don't put the film right to the edges, leave 2mm or so around the outside.
Why? It would be fine on the tail gate but that would look crap on the rear side windows when they are wound down. The guy who tinted my last car was a professional and did car tinting for a living. He put the film right to the edge of the glass (at the top anyway) and finished it off with a file so that the edge PERFECTLY followed the edge of the glass. It looked perfect when the windows were part way down, no s
tty edges etc.Maybe I was a little overstating the gap and you could indeed go less, what I should have said was 'in my day they didn't go right to the edge etc. etc'
I doubt though, the smallest gap would be very noticeable day to day. Great though if the technology allows it to butt up to the edge these days.
.Mark said:
mrmr96 said:
.Mark said:
*Don't put the film right to the edges, leave 2mm or so around the outside.
Why? It would be fine on the tail gate but that would look crap on the rear side windows when they are wound down. The guy who tinted my last car was a professional and did car tinting for a living. He put the film right to the edge of the glass (at the top anyway) and finished it off with a file so that the edge PERFECTLY followed the edge of the glass. It looked perfect when the windows were part way down, no s
tty edges etc.Maybe I was a little overstating the gap and you could indeed go less, what I should have said was 'in my day they didn't go right to the edge etc. etc'
I doubt though, the smallest gap would be very noticeable day to day. Great though if the technology allows it to butt up to the edge these days.
mrmr96 said:
.Mark said:
mrmr96 said:
.Mark said:
*Don't put the film right to the edges, leave 2mm or so around the outside.
Why? It would be fine on the tail gate but that would look crap on the rear side windows when they are wound down. The guy who tinted my last car was a professional and did car tinting for a living. He put the film right to the edge of the glass (at the top anyway) and finished it off with a file so that the edge PERFECTLY followed the edge of the glass. It looked perfect when the windows were part way down, no s
tty edges etc.Maybe I was a little overstating the gap and you could indeed go less, what I should have said was 'in my day they didn't go right to the edge etc. etc'
I doubt though, the smallest gap would be very noticeable day to day. Great though if the technology allows it to butt up to the edge these days.

Make sure the window you are tinting is wound right up. After spending a couple of hours one summers day, in the sauna that is a people carrier, doing what looked like a fantastic job only to find out that one window was down a tad and looked pretty crap when wound up fully i could have cried 

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