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I dont know what tint was used on my car, and dont really care as long as the job was done right and the end results was it looks good.

 

I asked my dealer to do a legal tint, which in IL is no more than 35% on all glass except the windshield. One thing that I know is always pain is the rear window since its a compound curve. There are multiple ways to do one, either in strips(not very good looking), dry shrink method where they use a powder as a lubricant and heat the film to shrink it to the window, or the wet method where they use a liquid as the lubricant to shrink it. either of the two shrink methods is good, so if the installer uses one of those, then they will do the job right.

 

As far as the actual film, there are many different varieties. Ceramic, Metallic, etc. as mentioned above, stay away from metallic as they interfere with RF. What you want is one that has a high UVa & B rating as blocking the highest amount of UV. Most good quality films have this, even those you get from Autozone and the like.

 

For mine it cost $299.95, and from what I remember from pricing the 2010, its about the same, and that was from a few different installers.

 

Usually an installer would have their own shop that also does stereo and other custom installations, and you can ask for references from their customers. Some dealerships also have a line on a good installer since there are times they have it done to cars they sell as an after market, and they most likely would not deal with a poor installer since they would be the ones getting the complaints.

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My co-pilot uses a mico fiber cloth (Norwex) with a little water (nothing else) and then follows that up with a polishing cloth (also Norwex). I was dubious and skeptical when she bought these but I was dead wrong. They did an incredible job with no hints of smearing, streaking or dirty glass even when driving into the direct sunlight. They can be washed in the washing machine (don't use fabric softener in washer or dryer) and they are ready to go again.

 

These Norwex cloths clean the inside auto glass better than anything we have ever used before. I was dubious but am now sold on them.

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That sounds great. Do you use the larger glass colth for cleaning and the standard-size one for drying/polishing?

There is a special polishing cloth. Our Norwex polishing cloth is purple in color. I believe these are the two she bought:

 

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003G4ZO4Y/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_1?pf_rd_p=1944687602&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=B003F8SNVM&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=19QP5CFJ5G9R8X3V8N3H

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Do you wet the window cloth with water first, then rub the cloth on the window? If so, how wet? I want to avoid spray bottles since I find they don't work well with the slanted windshield and rear window.

My other half says she saturates the cloth with hot water by holding it under the faucet, wrings it out, and then goes to work on the windshield (no spray bottles). Hope it works well for you.

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