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by namecheapTA
1402 days ago
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I'm sitting in a car with 150k miles on it, with the original windshield. It has one chip from when I followed a gravel truck too closely once.
Sometimes I even take it to a carwash in the summer with a baking hot windshield. Sometime I turn on the heater in the winter while it's snowing.
Amazingly, engineers have designed a glass product that is as heavy, thick, coated, whatever... To survive common usage for a decade. |
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You do not understand thermal shock. Remove your windshield and bring it inside. Lower your thermostat to 63° and let your windshield equalize at that temperature overnight. When the outside temperature reaches 90° the next day, rush your windshield outside.
Conversely, wait until winter and your windshield is left overnight in 35° temperatures. Boil a large pot of water, and dump the boiling water on your windshield.
It is not at all surprising that for 150K miles, your car's windshield has never experienced thermal shock.