Fixed my yellow/cracked headlight today (pics)

those headlights look great!!

After:

I had some pretty bad spiderweb cracks in this headlight so I had to remove a decent amount of material to get rid of them. I started out wet-sanding with 400 grit, then 800, and finished with 1500 grit. After everything was sanded smooth, I used a Novus 3-step plastic polishing kit ($11.95 shipped from Spa Depot).
It took me about 3-4 hours by hand, but I'm a perfectionist and stuff like this usually takes me a long time. If you decide to use any type of machine to do this, be careful... plastic is very sensitive to being over-heated. I only did the passenger side headlight, the driver's side was replaced not long before I bought the car due to the previous owner having an accident. I will probably pull the driver's side light next weekend and hit it with the Novus polish.
Here is an after pic:

Here are all of the pictures that I took showing the progress: linky
Can you explain "wet-sanding" more for me. I don't know if it means to keep the light wet while you rub it with the "grit".
Also, is taking off the headlight hard and or safe?
Where can I get the proper polish for these headlights?
Thank you for any help you can give me.
as the finer the paper, the quicker it clogs up. Wet sanding is used a lot on automotive paint jobs as it removes the orange peel and gives that nice, deep polished look. By using water while sanding, it helps the sandpaper from clogging up so fast and also helps lubricate/polish/cool the surface being sanded. I actually sprayed a bit of WD-40 cleaner on my paper when doing it, but I wouldn't advise that.
The lights arent too hard to remove, any $15 dollar manual from an automotive parts store can show you how. There maybe steps/pictures already here in the forum's archives or on Install University's site.
The plastic Polish and sand paper can be purchased from most automotive paint supply places and even Pep Boys. Meguiers, 3M and others make the polish.
HTH
David
two last questions, could anyone give an approximate estimate of the time needed for each step or grit of sandpaper
and i just assume that the polish has all the instructions i need on it?
The plastic polish is just a final polish. you use it as you would polish a car. dab some on a terry cloth towel (or old athletic sock, inside out) and rub away
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Last edited by brokez; Aug 21, 2005 at 08:40 PM.
I didn't know what was on the Camaro either, but my lenses were soooo bad I just took the chance. Halo's were the backup plan if I ruined them!




