@@viewtalay1297 That’s a very silly comment. When I fix my brakes, I replace the pads. I don’t replace the calipers or the rotors (unless I have to), but, yes, in fixing things there are usually parts we replace. In this video, most of the window remains. Now, there are people who try this fix with other methods, but they have to “replace” the argon.
Wow! Thank you for taking the TIME to put this out-very, very helpful for diy'ers!
Work great brother now all I gotta do is clean the inside of the window lol
Thanks so much for this video! I was determined to find a cheaper way to replace the foggy windows. I'll give this a shot
Thank you so much for sharing.. This is exactly what I need and having hard time finding any information online! Thank you!!!
Excellent! Glad I could help at least one person.
Super helpful so thanks!
Thank you!
Great info.
Thanks for sharing
When doing this method are you just replacing the glass or are you also replacing the argon between the glass that gives you the most insulation?
The unit you buy has it all in it. It’s two panes of glass with the gas between them. All you do is swap it out with the broken one.
So you didn’t so much repair the foggy unit as replace it.
Where's the link from the pros
In the description of the video, where I list the steps out. Each has a link if you need it for that step.
not a fix, it's a replacement
@@lindakingsley6765 it’s a “fix” of a foggy window. Yes, replacement of a component is involved. That often happens when we fix things.
Blah blah blah
Total waste of my time. This is REPLACEMENT not how to fix.
@@viewtalay1297 That’s a very silly comment. When I fix my brakes, I replace the pads. I don’t replace the calipers or the rotors (unless I have to), but, yes, in fixing things there are usually parts we replace. In this video, most of the window remains. Now, there are people who try this fix with other methods, but they have to “replace” the argon.