I was shotting a photo assignment once about the staff working in an auto
glass shop. The owner pulled his truck into the shop and told the guys to
remove and replace the windshield while I shot photos. It broke while they
were popping it out!


On Thu, Jul 4, 2013 at 5:18 PM, Mitch Haley <m...@voyager.net> wrote:

>
>
> Reminds me of the time I was getting an insurance replacement of a
> windshield with a bullseye in front of the driver. You could still see it
> after I injected filler into it, but it wasn't that bad. They arranged for
> a glass shop to make a house call. I mentioned to the glass shop manager
> that I wanted to keep the old one for a spare. He asked me if I could bring
> it into the shop and have two guys remove it instead of just the one he'd
> send out on a house call, to make sure it didn't get broken. I did and they
> broke it. When I mentioned it to a salvage yard operator, he told me that
> he'd never needed any help, and he'd never broken one taking it out.
>
> Does becoming a professional auto glass installer make it impossible for
> you to remove a piece of fixed glass without breaking it?
>
> Mitch.
>
>


-- 
OK Don
2013 F150, 19 mpg
2012 Passat TDI DSG, 45 mpg
1957 C182A, 12 mpg - but at 150 mph!
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