Postby Morph » Mon Feb 26, 2007 5:05 pm
No Bennie, all microlights use Polycarbonate as windscreen material and thus all will be suceptable to this sort of problem.
Replacing the windscreen is not a big job. Take the main cowl off (should have Dzus fastners or Rivnuts that screw out easily, remove the boot cowl, also with simple fastners. The windscreen is held on by two rows of rivets on either side and a row along the top by the roof. Very carefully drill these out using a 3.2mm drill. Be carefull not to scratch your paint.
Use the old windscreen as a template to cut the new one. Straight lines are easy to cut using a very sharp blade and a straight edge. Pull the blade along the straight edge a few times, I'd say about halfway through, then carefully bend it around a 90 bend and it will snap along this line.
I find a cutting blade on a grinder works very well and a sanding blade on a grinder is great for trimming edges and sanding around corners. Be aware it does scratch easily, so don't take of the protective cover until you have installed it.
Then as I have mentioned the holes for the rivets must be 4mm with 3.2mm rivets.
I estimate the cost of the Polycarb sheet to be less than R500. I have a very big piece of 2mm, (3.0m X 2.4m) which is twice what I need. You need about 1200 x 500 x 2mm for the standard size windscreen. If you are not in a big hurry we can talk about you buying a piece off me at a very reasonable price of course. Just got to figure about how to ship it to you without scratching it.
Greg Perkins