BMWZ4MC said:Ruby, I hope the A+E doc took advice from ophthalmology? Some chemicals need additional treatment not simply irrigation.
Nathanhu said:I try and make sure the glass is clean and then use a glass polish or rainX.
It stops the water laying on the window and makes scraping a lot easier.
Having a vehicle technician back ground, I can't believe some of you use hot water!! As small stone chip will run if your not very lucky. And you'll end up getting Gareth and his special resin around!! (Auto glass advert)
RubyBlueZ4MC said:BMWZ4MC said:Ruby, I hope the A+E doc took advice from ophthalmology? Some chemicals need additional treatment not simply irrigation.
Yes, he took the deicer can off me and went to speak to the Ophthalmologist - I overheard the phonecall. They just advised if any corneal damage then they would see me immedietly but if not then one week of chloramphenicol ointment to prevent secondary bacterial infection. Examination with slit lamp showed no damage thankfully.
BMWZ4MC said:Nathanhu said:I try and make sure the glass is clean and then use a glass polish or rainX.
It stops the water laying on the window and makes scraping a lot easier.
Having a vehicle technician back ground, I can't believe some of you use hot water!! As small stone chip will run if your not very lucky. And you'll end up getting Gareth and his special resin around!! (Auto glass advert)
As I said, I've never had a problem from using warm water on icy screens even in extreme temperatures... Oh and I have a 1cm stone chip in my 320d windscreen that hasn't got any bigger
I'm interested in the pre-treatment with glass polish or pre-icer spray though
BMWZ4MC said:I do agree that hot water would be asking for trouble...
How many days before I'm posting about how to get ice covered windscreen glass out of leather?![]()