Instantly Remove Oxidation from Headlight Without Sandpaper

Using abrasive methods such as sandpaper to remove oxidation from polycarbonate headlight lens is a big mistake if you only have a little bit of oxidation. You don't use a chainsaw to trim the hedges. You must use the least abrasive method first.

The modern projector headlight lens is made of POLYCARBONATE, not acrylic. Understand that the two materials are different. Acrylic does not yellow and is UV stable, but is brittle, therefore it is used only on taillights. Polycarbonate is strong and impact resistant, and therefore used on headlights to withstand rocks and pebbles, but yellows under UV light without a protective UV coating. Manufacturers use a thin hardcoat silicone as a protective coating. This coating is damaged over several years if exposed to lots of sunlight, unless you constantly wax and seal it. If you have neglected the headlights and allowed the UV coating to deteriorate, you will have to find a coating that has similar properties to the original hard silicone coating. Using a deoxidizer at this point does nothing.

Steps

  1. If we take this from a scientific approach we must look at the problem as a doctor would when he diagnosed a problem. Is the problem oxidation? Or is it something else?
  2. Understand oxidation. Oxidation is a flat opaque covering that lays evenly on the surface of the lens, It will start out white turn yellow and eventually brown. It can build up and block all light from leaving the lens. It is semi-smooth to the touch.
    • If your headlights are very yellowed, even a deoxidizer will not help. At that point, your headlight's UV coating is already fully damaged and the polycarbonate is exposed to the elements. It is the nature of polycarbonate to turn yellow under UV light. Sealing the surface with a non yellowing layer will prevent the polycarbonate from turning yellow.
  3. Understand surface damage. This consists of obvious visual imperfections on the lens, such as chipping, scaring, scratching and damage caused by the use of a sandpaper type cleaning process.
    • After market sealers are the also a problem. These sealers are generally polyurethane or acrylic based. They have no yellow stopping UV protection. Over time the heat from the bulb and the light from the sun will cause them to yellow and crack. However, UV stabilized hardened clear coat paint will not yellow and crack. There are a few other coatings that supposedly do not yellow, such as certain epoxies. Be careful what type of clear coating you buy. It might be too late for you now, but the key is to preserve the UV coating with waxes and sealants when you still have a substantial UV coating left.
  4. Consider your removal options. Once it can be determined if the problem is oxidation or surface damage, you must next decide a method of treatment.
    • 90% of headlights that need cleaning are afflicted with oxidation and do not need sandpaper, so don't jump to the most aggressive solution. The other 10% have actual surface damage which will need sandpaper.
    • If surface damage is your problem stop here. There is no process that will restore your lens. They will have to be resurfaced and that will require the use of abrasives and power tools.
  5. If your problem is oxidation you can restore your headlight lens in seconds without fear of damage to the delicate UV layer with a non abrasive DE-oxidizer, which uses a non-abrasive chemical cleaner to remove light to medium oxidation.

Tips

  • Literally millions of headlights have been cleaned with a variety of methods from toothpaste to rubbing compound. All cause non repairable damage to the UV layer.
  • Oxidation is a naturally reoccurring factor. It will rebuild on a surface it has been removed from, therefore the headlight lens must be sealed with another product after oxidation removal to help prevent recurrence of oxidation.
  • Stop the oxidation before it happens. Apply waxes or sealants MONTHLY from the day you buy your new car. This will help preserve the factory UV coating bonded to the polycarbonate lens.
  • All deoxidizer are not the created equal. In fact most are not true deoxidizers they are polishes and rubbing compounds. A true deoxidizer reacts at a molecular level and removes oxidation on contact. If you buy a deoxidizer and it does not work, demand a refund.
  • Oxidation can be removed with a DEoxidizer but the surface damage will remain. If you already have surface damage, you should not be using a deoxidizer.

Warnings

  • Molecular reactive acrylic lens deoxidizer should not be applied to painted surfaces.

Things You'll Need

  • Microfiber cloth
  • Scratch/swirl remover/polish, oxidation remover.
  • Wax or sealant

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