You can flip the front of the glass downwards into the window slot and as you get it in there rotate it back to its original position sliding it into its guiding grooves
The final effort looks good. I approve of the pride that you take in a job done right. I somehow missed this last night. By the way I was down to Richmond Indiana a few weeks ago. Thank you Dave.
Unless i suck at googling this was the only window replacement video i could find on these trucks, got to do mine soon its such a rusty pos the rail is completely rotted and if i roll it down all the way the wheel gets stuck in a rust hole and of course the a/c don’t work. Doesn’t look to bad of a job, i figured that whole panel had to come off.
Actually that lead based paint is durable. I once spilled tomato juice on paint, and didn't clean it up for a while. I'm not surprised that the citrus worked. Thank you Dave.
Dave, thanks for doing round 2, and I'm surprised as you that the citrus worked so well! Your work with this can hopefully save many time, money, and efforts with this information 👍👍👍
When using that stuff try and put it on as thick as possible and cover it with plastic wrap or something to keep it from drying . And let it sit for my e an hour or so. Or keep on adding coats to keep it wet
So the only advantage that real aircraft stripper has is that is not harsh on aluminum it was fast though. Those all three need to be put on thick, and the colder it is the slower they tend to work, lead in the paint slower yet and none of them work great. Some of the citrus pastes work better than those, it depends more upon the type of paint you are trying to get off. My favorite old stand by is lye/oven cleaner, followed by MEK.
A lifetime ago I had the real aircraft stripper and it was amazing. I actually forgot about oven cleaner. Maybe I should do a followup video trying it. Seems I once heard the cheaper the oven cleaner the better it worked.