Found this in my local Asda store. Rain X Headlight Restoration Kit £7.50 down from £15. Unsure if nationwide.
13 comments
VCB-160
10 Sep 17#1
Just watched this been demonstrated on YouTube seems to do a good job might have to invest in some of this for my headlights. Thanks heat.
FTOdude170
10 Sep 17#2
a very very expensive toothpaste......
Calvin_
10 Sep 17#3
Yep toothpaste does the same job. Save yourself the money
psmith1958 to Calvin_
10 Sep 17#8
Fully agree :smile:
Zameen to psmith1958
10 Sep 17#10
So what do you do squeeze toothpaste and run with a cloth and wash off ?
jamhops to Zameen
10 Sep 17#11
Pretty much I find cheaper toothpaste is better
acj7744
10 Sep 17#4
For people saying toothpaste does the same job I hope not. The thing with the toothpaste method is that in a few weeks they will look the same if not worse. You'd hope this stuff provides a more permanent solution.
FTOdude170 to acj7744
10 Sep 17#5
not in my experience. its lasted as long as doing it any other way. at the end of the day, its just abrasion.
adsm
10 Sep 17#6
Have tried the toothpaste method over a period of time on a headlight however it made no difference
dm575
10 Sep 17#7
Solvol Autosol metal polish does the job. Just abrasive enough to remove the "fog".
gazdoubleu to dm575
10 Sep 17#9
Second that
Proveright
10 Sep 17#12
Tooth paste and elbow grease with a cleaning cloth and water does the job easier than very fine wet and dry paper.
If you want a pucker job with a more permenant solution, then mask it off and spray the cleaned lens with clear coat.
mistr009 to Proveright
10 Sep 17#13
This. When you've cleaned it up use a UV resistant clear coat spray to prevent the lens yellowing again
Opening post
13 comments
Thanks heat.
If you want a pucker job with a more permenant solution, then mask it off and spray the cleaned lens with clear coat.