My wife just got her a new 2013 Lexus ES350 and after buying it I took it straight home, cleaned and polished it, then treated the car with Cquartz... and the treated the windshield with FlyBy30 from CarPro. This past weekend was the first time we have driven it in the rain... and at night. As the wipers moved across the windshield it left a temporary haze, although it quickly faded away, it came right back with the next wipe. It was bad enough to cause either of us from being able to see very well. It was very dangerous to even be driving under these conditions.
I also got a new 2013 Honda Civic (yeah, she got the nice one) and we drove it as well this weekend and low and behold it has the same haze. I did not treat it though. However, the car dealer did put some type of protection treatment on the car. They tried to charge me $499 for it, but I refused to pay it, yet they still put it on the car. Ultimately he told me it only cost them $89 so they included it because they had already applied it to the car I wanted.
What can I do to make sure the windshields will not haze? Obviously I need to stay away from FlyBy30 and probably other treatments like this, unless there is one that is known not to haze. First I guess I need to strip what is on there, but not sure the best method and what to use.
Any recommendations and advice is much appreciated. I would like to get these fixed before it rains again.
I also got a new 2013 Honda Civic (yeah, she got the nice one) and we drove it as well this weekend and low and behold it has the same haze. I did not treat it though. However, the car dealer did put some type of protection treatment on the car. They tried to charge me $499 for it, but I refused to pay it, yet they still put it on the car. Ultimately he told me it only cost them $89 so they included it because they had already applied it to the car I wanted.
What can I do to make sure the windshields will not haze? Obviously I need to stay away from FlyBy30 and probably other treatments like this, unless there is one that is known not to haze. First I guess I need to strip what is on there, but not sure the best method and what to use.
Any recommendations and advice is much appreciated. I would like to get these fixed before it rains again.