Forgot to update about the Lexan windows. I bought pre-cut and shaped replacements for the door and and rear tailgate glazing. The little quarterlights didn't look like good value for the weight saving.
Started by stripping the doors of the window regulators and motors. The glass itself comes out pretty easy so long as you drop the window to line up with the access hole before you remove the motor! Never fitted Lexan to frameless doors before but it wasn't too tricky to get the window lined up against the seals. Without the auto-drop/lift it needs to be a little lower than OEM.

(the blue tint is protection film - removed after I've finished with the install)
My technique for holding the window in position is to drill a hole through the door and continue carefully through the window itself. A bolt holds the window up, and a nut pushes it outward so that it's flush against the external seal. It's fiddly, but simple and effective.

The tailgate glass was more difficult. Never removed a bonded window before but bought some tools, watched some YouTube and it all worked out. Cleaned the old rubber trim with petrol to remove the adhesive and used some 3M trim tape I had lying around to attach it to the Lexan. A thick bead of Tiger Seal around the tailgate was mostly OK but I could have done with more. Noticed that some parts of the Lexan were not fully down. To apply some more pressure I laid the old glass over the top and popped a wheel/tyre to weight it down. Seems to have worked, but I've not done a hosepipe test yet...

Looks like a worthwhile endeavour though:
- 8.75kg saved across both doors
- 3.89kg saved on tailgate
- 12.6kg TOTAL SAVING
That's 22.3kg saved so far during the off-season (aka lockdown). And I've not finished yet.
Started by stripping the doors of the window regulators and motors. The glass itself comes out pretty easy so long as you drop the window to line up with the access hole before you remove the motor! Never fitted Lexan to frameless doors before but it wasn't too tricky to get the window lined up against the seals. Without the auto-drop/lift it needs to be a little lower than OEM.

(the blue tint is protection film - removed after I've finished with the install)
My technique for holding the window in position is to drill a hole through the door and continue carefully through the window itself. A bolt holds the window up, and a nut pushes it outward so that it's flush against the external seal. It's fiddly, but simple and effective.

The tailgate glass was more difficult. Never removed a bonded window before but bought some tools, watched some YouTube and it all worked out. Cleaned the old rubber trim with petrol to remove the adhesive and used some 3M trim tape I had lying around to attach it to the Lexan. A thick bead of Tiger Seal around the tailgate was mostly OK but I could have done with more. Noticed that some parts of the Lexan were not fully down. To apply some more pressure I laid the old glass over the top and popped a wheel/tyre to weight it down. Seems to have worked, but I've not done a hosepipe test yet...

Looks like a worthwhile endeavour though:
- 8.75kg saved across both doors
- 3.89kg saved on tailgate
- 12.6kg TOTAL SAVING
That's 22.3kg saved so far during the off-season (aka lockdown). And I've not finished yet.