So I found a few vids on using this stuff and people have rated this product very high. I am excited to see how this turns out. I will post pics later. Maybe even a vid. Has anyone on here used VHT?
i only did one coat on my tail lights. you can see it very fine during the day and night. and besides, the tail lights are very bright. I wouldnt want to totally black out the lights though. Are you venting because you hate blacked out lights?Why would one want to reduce the visibility of their tailights, brake lights, and rear turn signals???? So they can say their car looked cool until they got rear ended and ended up in the hospital?
Is an accident investigator going to miss that the lights were obscured? In a lawsuit, will a jury think that a "reasonable and prudent person" (the usual test) would have obscured their lights?
:doh:
IMO and FWIW.![]()
That looks clean. I want to tint or spray my tail lights but I can't risk it where I live. There's multiple town police departments by me, and tons of state troopers. I can literally take a drive to the gas station, and pass by 3-4 cruisers and speed traps, even though there may only be a few dozen police around here. It's crazy. Having my windows fully tinted is pushing my luck. I can't risk compounding it with the tail lights.Here is the pic I promised you guys. Enjoy.
I don't care about the appearance of blacked out lights one way or the other. I just don't like getting rear ended. And the liability question gives me pause also.i only did one coat on my tail lights. you can see it very fine during the day and night. and besides, the tail lights are very bright. I wouldnt want to totally black out the lights though. Are you venting because you hate blacked out lights?
ya i would probably be paranoid like that too. We have the tinted windows and the tail lights. But ya as far as anyone hitting the back of our car, is HIGHLY unlikely. If they did hit the back of the car and there was no police report I would just goo gone the stuff off and viola.That looks clean. I want to tint or spray my tail lights but I can't risk it where I live. There's multiple town police departments by me, and tons of state troopers. I can literally take a drive to the gas station, and pass by 3-4 cruisers and speed traps, even though there may only be a few dozen police around here. It's crazy. Having my windows fully tinted is pushing my luck. I can't risk compounding it with the tail lights.
Further to my previous response, my thinking is based on a belief that a driver who rear ends another may just have been inept, not keeping enough space between it and the car it is following. But they may also be doing their makeup, texting, juggling a Big Mac and a cell phone, etc. I believe that brighter lights have a greater chance to hopefully get the attention of the distracted drive....Are you venting because you hate blacked out lights?
oh ok.. i see what you are saying. I wonder if the tail lights that are still blacked out will be covered under the insurance if someone hit. If someone did hit me and the tail lights weren't effected or even if they were i would use the goo gone to take off the black. then it wouldnt be an issue.Further to my previous response, my thinking is based on a belief that a driver who rear ends another may just have been inept, not keeping enough space between it and the car it is following. But they may also be doing their makeup, texting, juggling a Big Mac and a cell phone, etc. I believe that brighter lights have a greater chance to hopefully get the attention of the distracted drive.
FWIW and YMMV.
And that's why I take pictures from the scene of an accident before I file the claimya i would probably be paranoid like that too. We have the tinted windows and the tail lights. But ya as far as anyone hitting the back of our car, is HIGHLY unlikely. If they did hit the back of the car and there was no police report I would just goo gone the stuff off and viola.
ya i should probably look into that.And that's why I take pictures from the scene of an accident before I file the claim
Still, even with darkened tail lights like that, it would be a hard case for the person who rear-ended you to argue. I've never handled a claim where someone claimed that they rear-ended a car because they had darkened tails. But rear-end accidents are almost always the fault of the rear vehicle for following too closely. The main exception is if the front vehicle had faulty equipment. Yeah, the tail lights themselves are working just fine, but I wonder if there's a federal or state regulation where the tail lights must put out such and such number of lumens or candlepower through the tail light assembly. That might be what it comes down to. But that's all pure speculation on my part since I've never handled any claims like that and wouldn't really know until it happens.