Headlight polish

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M_Beorn

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I'm sure there's already a thread somewhere but can someone give me some advise on the best kit to clean / polish lenses? I seem to remember seeing on one of the car shows one that had like three steps and ended with a sealer. My running light lenses are pretty fogged over and need refinishing.

Thanks
 

SUBURBIAN

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You can buy new ones for around the same money as one of those kits.
 

drakon543

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Maguire sells a basic headlight polishing compound if you want to try to fix the ones you have just go with that. Those restore kits will either work or make them 100x worse than they were jusy faded. Ive used the maguires headlight compound with a basic foam buffing wheel i use for my rims on some pretty nasty headlights with amazing results.
 

ATIII

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I have used this personally with Great results. Made the lenses look brand new and clear except for the small microcracks that are through out them due to being hit by rocks. Nothing will get rid of these, because the plastic is cracked. I've also heard to spray them with Clear after the restoration kit to prolong the Re-Finish.

http://www.amazon.com/3M-39008-Headlight-Restoration-System/dp/B001AIZ5HY
 

aces-n-eights

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I watched a youtube vid of a guy that wet sands the light covers with first 600 grit and finishing with 2000 grit. They will look pretty hazy but then he sprayed the light covers with a clear coat "paint" in a rattle can. I just did mine and it looks great.

If you do this be sure you get clear coat that is UV resistant and non-yellowing. The cost is abut $7 for the clear coat and a few bucks for wet sandpaper. It should last a long time...
 

adventurenali92

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So detailing here in Southern California where we have more than abundant amounts of sunshine, lol, I get a ton of clients cars with yellowed headlights. I've tried every kit there is to buy that claims to restore headlights. They all suck. I always stick with what my mentor showed me for headlights. Several runs of a wet sand, as @aces-n-eights mentioned. Sand a couple passes with 600-1200 grit sandpaper. However my method is different after the sanding. I take my rotary polisher with a compound I buy from my supplier from their V-Line polish, usually the heaviest which is called V32. That on a hex logic polishing pad, yellow, and it takes the haze off. Usually a couple passes although I have to be gentle as the rotary polisher will do a lot of damage very quickly if not used correctly. Once the lens is cleared of oxidation, I finish with several coats of a specialized 6 month paint sealant I buy from my supplier called jet seal. I usually use jet seal as a winter time paint sealant for my customers here where I live in the mountains as it is designed specifically to protect paint through the cold and snow we get here. It works phenomenally. Finishing the headlights with several at least two coats of jet seal will prevent headlights from oxidizing again. Regular wax can be used to seal the lens but it will ware off ad need to be reapplied often in order to prevent headlights from reoxidizing. I just did a set of headlights on a 2005 Denali xl that a client has for sale before the weekend. They come out pretty nice. I'll grab the pics from my phone. Although I couldn't get the running light lenses to clear. The angle doesn't allow for enough surface area of the polishing pad to make contact with the lens to polish. So I'm looking for a solution to that problem.
 

SUBURBIAN

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Running lights are less than $10 apiece at rockauto. It takes less than 10 minutes to swap them in.
 

TheAutumnWind

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So detailing here in Southern California where we have more than abundant amounts of sunshine, lol, I get a ton of clients cars with yellowed headlights. I've tried every kit there is to buy that claims to restore headlights. They all suck. I always stick with what my mentor showed me for headlights. Several runs of a wet sand, as @aces-n-eights mentioned. Sand a couple passes with 600-1200 grit sandpaper. However my method is different after the sanding. I take my rotary polisher with a compound I buy from my supplier from their V-Line polish, usually the heaviest which is called V32. That on a hex logic polishing pad, yellow, and it takes the haze off. Usually a couple passes although I have to be gentle as the rotary polisher will do a lot of damage very quickly if not used correctly. Once the lens is cleared of oxidation, I finish with several coats of a specialized 6 month paint sealant I buy from my supplier called jet seal. I usually use jet seal as a winter time paint sealant for my customers here where I live in the mountains as it is designed specifically to protect paint through the cold and snow we get here. It works phenomenally. Finishing the headlights with several at least two coats of jet seal will prevent headlights from oxidizing again. Regular wax can be used to seal the lens but it will ware off ad need to be reapplied often in order to prevent headlights from reoxidizing. I just did a set of headlights on a 2005 Denali xl that a client has for sale before the weekend. They come out pretty nice. I'll grab the pics from my phone. Although I couldn't get the running light lenses to clear. The angle doesn't allow for enough surface area of the polishing pad to make contact with the lens to polish. So I'm looking for a solution to that problem.


Yup. Best way to do it.

I just repolished mine with my random orbit polisher and some mequiars polish.
 

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