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Miscellaneous Automotive
Car Electronics & Appearance
full windshield tint
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<blockquote data-quote="Crispix396" data-source="post: 1087257" data-attributes="member: 562676"><p>sit in someones car who has limo in the back and 35 on the side windows. take a peice of cardboard and block up the windshield so the light wont mess with your eyes and look out that for a minute. then roll the window and look out with NO tint and see the difference it makes on the other windows....</p><p></p><p>the only way i think it would really make any issue is if you had a bright interior (lots of neons and tvs and stuff like that) because the more light going into your eye, the tinier the eye gets. the tinier your eye gets the less outside light gets in. or if you had a white interior.</p><p></p><p>The problem with judging by that photo is... it does not matter how dark it looks from outside, even the camera works the same way. if you have bright light , anything that is not that bright will look reallly dark. the only true way to tell is to block out all 'white points' and to look like that. I honestly cant remember what it looked like driving in the rain, but i do know that NOONE ever realized that the windshield was tinted unless I told them or they looked from the outside. or i rolled a window down and blinded them.</p><p></p><p>Actually, think of it like wearing sunglasses. If you raise the sunglasses up a little bit so that you can see the ground beneath the glasses, the glasses will look really dark, but put them down, and you can see just fine.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Crispix396, post: 1087257, member: 562676"] sit in someones car who has limo in the back and 35 on the side windows. take a peice of cardboard and block up the windshield so the light wont mess with your eyes and look out that for a minute. then roll the window and look out with NO tint and see the difference it makes on the other windows.... the only way i think it would really make any issue is if you had a bright interior (lots of neons and tvs and stuff like that) because the more light going into your eye, the tinier the eye gets. the tinier your eye gets the less outside light gets in. or if you had a white interior. The problem with judging by that photo is... it does not matter how dark it looks from outside, even the camera works the same way. if you have bright light , anything that is not that bright will look reallly dark. the only true way to tell is to block out all 'white points' and to look like that. I honestly cant remember what it looked like driving in the rain, but i do know that NOONE ever realized that the windshield was tinted unless I told them or they looked from the outside. or i rolled a window down and blinded them. Actually, think of it like wearing sunglasses. If you raise the sunglasses up a little bit so that you can see the ground beneath the glasses, the glasses will look really dark, but put them down, and you can see just fine. [/QUOTE]
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full windshield tint
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