It would be interesting to see if you reached out to the company, if they would send someone to your shop to show you how to use it correctly or just prove that it works as a follow-up video.
it wont darken much on a windshield due to the fact windshields have a UV inhibitor, my glasses are transition and do not darken much the side windows do not shield from UV rays. also some states do not allow tinting on windshields
I've heard that transition tint only works with direct sunlight, whereas most auto glass has UV built into the glass. So, if you apply a transition tint to glass, if it is installed inside/behind the UV glass, the tint will not transition as well as it would on the outside due to the UV protection. It is, therefore, the UV protection that is affecting how the tint changes.
Not sure if it’s the same brand or not since I did it last year but I installed a similar tint on my glass security door on my house and it definitely works and changes with the sun but it’s a super flat surface and just plain glass with zero uv protection.
Because the transition activates with UV light that also means there are no UV absorbers in the mounting adhesive. I have analyzed many of these films and most have the transition coating applied to a UV treated polyester that is after the sun exposed side when installed on the inside surface of the glass. This also means an exterior install would not allow the coating to darken. Windshields block 95% to 98% of the UV light. Depends on the PVB interlayer used. It was fun watching to see your reaction when it didn’t change when pulled outside. As for installing on house windows, low-e windows block UV. How much depends on if the low-e is single, double (low-e2), or triple silver (low-e3). Low-e3 (LoĒ3-366) blocks more than 80% of the UV light. This will affect how dark the film will get. More UV = darker. As you found out the best glass to install this film to will be a clear single pane non-laminated glass.
It's the exact same issue with my Rx. sunglasses. Inside the car they don't darken because the UV light is blocked by the windows. I have to use clip-ons over them which is ten kinds of stupid.
Actually, it is. For about 2 years now there is transition lens that will tint inside UV glassed vehicles. I have a couple Rx pairs and they work great here in the LA sun.
I've been getting my photochromic lenses from a company in France and I've never had a problem with them not darkening. I've been using these lenses since the mid 80s as the brightness was giving me headaches. I have old lenses going back 15 years that I use when doing rough work around home or in the garden so it doesn't matter if they get marked up.
Real electrochromic tint exists and it's amazing, but I've only seen it in high-end homes and offices. It can be on/off or infinitely variable. Pricey stuff. Not a big demand for it in the auto world yet.
I saw a video of a car that the manufacturer put it on the sunroof only. I think it was an older Toyota model. I don’t know why this hasn’t been integrated into luxury cars to hopefully trickle down to everyday cars.
A lot of automobile windows have UV blocking so they would prevent any reactive film to work that relies on UV rays to activate. Windshields are almost always protected against UV and some side windows also. Transition glasses do the same thing when inside the car.
@@BlackoutTinting I was specifically looking for that type of tint and I had heard of their parent company before. The other company I was looking at was in Canada so I went with the US company.
@@BlackoutTinting yes, I bought it through and have only dealt with smart tint for the stealth tint. They gave me a sample of smart tint and that product is pretty cool. It is fragile though.
Even self tinting glasses don't change when you are in the car. You have to step out from behind the glass for them to change. The tint would have to be on the outside of any window to work.
I just had my 944 tinted earlier this year and I swear I was asking everyone and their mother if they had this type of film and no one even knew it existed! Honestly though I wouldn’t trade my lifetime warranty for that especially seeing how difficult it is to work with. I get to still be happy about my choice 😂
@@BlackoutTinting The absolute truth, but after 8 years of searching I finally found a shop who didn’t shy away from me and we went with some pretty decent film. I paid them $1,000 and gave them the car for an entire week so they could take their time with it. They did the back glass all in one piece I get a lifetime warranty with it through them They installed air blue 80 for me on the windshield and we did formula one pinnacle on the doors quarters and that big giant hatch. I chose 35% and I think it was the perfect sweet spot. So far it’s been great they did a fantastic job and there’s no bubbling or creases and out here in Phx there’s for sure a difference between no tint and tint on those 110 degree days. It’s definitely hot but what I don’t think people focus on enough is just how much faster the car cools down with some high quality ceramic film. Long story short anytime someone says vettes are the hardest cars to tint I say “hold my beer” 😂😂😂😂 Love your channel and the high quality work you guys always show and testing tint like this is what helped me pick what I wanted for my car so thank you! We need some new 944 content! Bring it in for a detail!
I think that's the same issue with those tester tints on glass box with the heat lamp inside and they say it doesn't transmit heat when you touch the tinted glass (and yes you can't feel any heat. 🤔 I believe on the sample test has the tint applied on the inside where the heat bulb is but on a car the heat is on outside, but the tint is applied inside so the application is not the same and so the glass is heated first so the tint can't do it's job. At least that's my theory.🤷🏻♂️
My buddy owns a shop and tried to install it on the outside of my 2023 BMW M1000RR Windscreen and he had the same problems on a much smaller piece. The words he used to describe it aren't TH-cam safe is all I'm willing to say about it😜
You should send your video link to the manufacturer so they can send it to their engineers. I bet they can work out a solution as it’s probably the plastic that needs improvement vs the technology of shade changing.
What's frustrating on the tint for my new plastic lens eyeglasses is the tints wear out to clear over time about a couple of years. While my glass eyeglasses I have tint that has lasted decades. I hope the new plastic tint lasts over 4 years.
The reason it’s not darkening is because the windshield has us blocking. Same reason why your prescription transition glasses don’t get dark inside a car.
Yes I was wondering why he installed on inside. That’s one of the reasons I don’t get those sunglasses that automatically darken - they are useless inside a car.
All modern cars have UV protection on the windows. You need to have the UV to activate the tint. If you've ever bought the auto darkening glasses you know they're worthless when you're driving.
Put that transition tint on a window of an older car, so that we can see the effect. Older cars usually don't have window tint, which is why people would buy tint, bonus if it is transition tint. People who can afford a newer car usually don't need to buy tint for the windows because newer cars usually have tint and rear view cameras that can see in the dark quite well. And if they did want transition window tint, they would need to remove the existing tint and replace it with the transition tint. Just need to be mindful of UV blocking window coating and/or laminate. 😉
Windshield has UV protection.. how you don't know that? I saw a Maserati quattroporte had it on the driver window, he raised the clear glass and made me wonder how I didn't notice the dark tint.. I saw it like 4 or 5 years ago.. I would keep looking for products because I know they exist for cars.. Good luck
Hi I was told that you cannot tint your sunroof because of thermal expansion. They said that the glass for sunroof’s are different than the door and windshield and rear glass. Is that true???
Dude the windscreen is laminated, you know what that means right. It is 2 pieces of glass with a layer of UV reducing material sandwiched in between, that is why it is not darkening on the inside of the windscreen. It will work on the side and back windows as they are not laminated. 1st time seeing your channel.
Been there done that. Cars windows have UV protection so this product will not work correctly. I’m so surprised at that he didn’t already know that from tinting cars for many years
Maybe, but they advertise it otherwise. And even if it is applied to the exterior, it still can affect thermal expansion and damage windows. There's something called a film to glass chart that typically a manufacturer provides to show which film is safe on which glass. Nothing like that with this
Because it's the toughest piece of glass to do, and the company told us it would work just fine. We were testing the product not doing a real install for a customer
My transition glasses will not darken INSIDE a car because the factory glass blocks UV. Unless you install it on the outside of the car, it ain’t gonna work.
No thank you I will stick with LLumar tint. The clear no heat film is just that clear with little to zero heat from the sun and it has a lifetime warranty!
You get what you pay for. I paid the extra coin for CERAMIC tint, not carbon tint. The cheap tint bubbles and turns purple. I went 20% because of my lupus, I'm allergic to the UV rays and with the ceramic tint even at 20% I can BARELY tell it's tinted yet from the outside you can BARELY see inside. It's TWICE as much as the carbon tint but worth every penny and has a lifetime warranty, even if your kid cuts it.
I'm wondering if anyone can explain what those white fluffy things are in the sky. I've been walking the 🌎 for almost 60 years, and I've NEVER seen those before...🤔🫤🥴🫠
because it would be a slightly similar story and we could never sell it on side windows only while neglecting the rear and front shields. So it just didn't make sense
@@BlackoutTinting if the customer is ok with it then it's something I would do. it is not the put all film out of business type of a thing either as some say. it is additional.
@@BlackoutTinting If we want to get technical we can break it dpwn to UVA, UVB and UVC. Regardless, your statement that UV light was responsible for making the tint growing darker, doesn't really hold up given that it is blocked by glass.
@BlackoutTinting lol... I did.... the only question now is.... why did you put it on the inside of the glass if you knew? Why were you befuddled if you knew? To be honest this seems more like you are pretending to be a fool as an effort to promote the product by being oblivious to the obvious.... if so.... well played
Those “transition” or photochromic glasses are near useless. They don’t darken when you need them most, like while driving on a bright summer day, because they don’t react to what you see, only to when UV light hits them directly. You’d have to hold them out the window while driving (blindly, without your prescription lenses), then pull them in and put them on for a few minutes while they slowly untint, then hold them out the window again. Rinse. Repeat. Stupid. Just get prescription sunglasses as well.
This guy was not doing his best to make this product work. He is obviously dishonest and cannot be trusted to give you advice of the best window tint material for your car or house. Having Integrity is a sign of doing good business and receiving excellent customer service. Personally, this video is not represented properly. If this tint can work on eye glasses. It can work on car window.
I think you guys not that knowledgeable probably install incorrectly or not for right applications. That company would've been out of business and lawsuits! Call company and talk to customer service see what they say!
❤ Jesus loves you.. Please bring him into your heart before it's too late.. These events are not from climate change.. but from God warning US the time of his wrath is coming... 😢 Please be saved by His Blood, my friend 🙏
Know your job and your products before you start talking. windshields have UV filters that's why it's not working. Also heat shrinking distorts vision through the film so it should only be done in the far corners where distorted vision isn't an issue.
It would be interesting to see if you reached out to the company, if they would send someone to your shop to show you how to use it correctly or just prove that it works as a follow-up video.
Stay tuned
it wont darken much on a windshield due to the fact windshields have a UV inhibitor, my glasses are transition and do not darken much the side windows do not shield from UV rays. also some states do not allow tinting on windshields
Not true not all states!!
@@9Ball88 He said SOME states and it is illegal to tint windshields in SOME states.
We inform all customers of the tint laws
Double it down now
@@9Ball88
Do you know how to read?
I've heard that transition tint only works with direct sunlight, whereas most auto glass has UV built into the glass. So, if you apply a transition tint to glass, if it is installed inside/behind the UV glass, the tint will not transition as well as it would on the outside due to the UV protection. It is, therefore, the UV protection that is affecting how the tint changes.
I hope the tint has durability over several years.
Not sure if it’s the same brand or not since I did it last year but I installed a similar tint on my glass security door on my house and it definitely works and changes with the sun but it’s a super flat surface and just plain glass with zero uv protection.
There’s not a cloud in the sky yet there’s clouds everywhere!
In Pittsburgh this is as sunny as it gets!
Because the transition activates with UV light that also means there are no UV absorbers in the mounting adhesive. I have analyzed many of these films and most have the transition coating applied to a UV treated polyester that is after the sun exposed side when installed on the inside surface of the glass. This also means an exterior install would not allow the coating to darken.
Windshields block 95% to 98% of the UV light. Depends on the PVB interlayer used. It was fun watching to see your reaction when it didn’t change when pulled outside.
As for installing on house windows, low-e windows block UV. How much depends on if the low-e is single, double (low-e2), or triple silver (low-e3). Low-e3 (LoĒ3-366) blocks more than 80% of the UV light. This will affect how dark the film will get. More UV = darker.
As you found out the best glass to install this film to will be a clear single pane non-laminated glass.
They needed to consult with you before marketing this film.
@@BlackoutTintingthey should put him on bloody retainer as a Consulting Engineer in the R&D department.
@@APinTheAK we are typing up a 7 figure contract as I type!
Double it down now
thanks for the warning
It's the exact same issue with my Rx. sunglasses. Inside the car they don't darken because the UV light is blocked by the windows. I have to use clip-ons over them which is ten kinds of stupid.
Technology isn't quite there yet it seems
🤣😂🤣🫡
Actually, it is. For about 2 years now there is transition lens that will tint inside UV glassed vehicles. I have a couple Rx pairs and they work great here in the LA sun.
I've been getting my photochromic lenses from a company in France and I've never had a problem with them not darkening. I've been using these lenses since the mid 80s as the brightness was giving me headaches. I have old lenses going back 15 years that I use when doing rough work around home or in the garden so it doesn't matter if they get marked up.
@@Iceberg1313 Yes, outside. But do they darken when you're in the car? That's the point. They don't.
Modern windshields are UV blocking and unless you put the film on the outside you will not see any reaction from the light.
Real electrochromic tint exists and it's amazing, but I've only seen it in high-end homes and offices. It can be on/off or infinitely variable. Pricey stuff. Not a big demand for it in the auto world yet.
I saw a video of a car that the manufacturer put it on the sunroof only. I think it was an older Toyota model. I don’t know why this hasn’t been integrated into luxury cars to hopefully trickle down to everyday cars.
@@AFTER_MIDNITEnice 👍
A lot of automobile windows have UV blocking so they would prevent any reactive film to work that relies on UV rays to activate. Windshields are almost always protected against UV and some side windows also. Transition glasses do the same thing when inside the car.
Yes it gets darker but does it block uv light?
Tints for me are only worth it if it stops my car from turning into an oven
That was a claim we didn't get to because it can't exist how our customers would want to buy it
I got scammed by this company too. Paid to have it installed on the fronts of my car and it only goes down to 50%. DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT.
How did you find out about them?
@@BlackoutTinting I was specifically looking for that type of tint and I had heard of their parent company before. The other company I was looking at was in Canada so I went with the US company.
They are supposedly associated with smart tint and riotfilm? Not sure if that's true...
@@BlackoutTinting yes, I bought it through and have only dealt with smart tint for the stealth tint. They gave me a sample of smart tint and that product is pretty cool. It is fragile though.
Finally, I’ve been thinking about the possibility of transition tint for car windows, I hope it works!
🥴
Been had this on my car
Even self tinting glasses don't change when you are in the car. You have to step out from behind the glass for them to change. The tint would have to be on the outside of any window to work.
Infinity had it on some of their cars in the 90's
Make a video on that electric tint with a switch but the smoked version not that opaque or white looking type
you got it
I just had my 944 tinted earlier this year and I swear I was asking everyone and their mother if they had this type of film and no one even knew it existed!
Honestly though I wouldn’t trade my lifetime warranty for that especially seeing how difficult it is to work with. I get to still be happy about my choice 😂
Man!!! I have a few 944s and learned to tint on them. The hardest cars on earth to tint, even with a good film!!
@@BlackoutTinting The absolute truth, but after 8 years of searching I finally found a shop who didn’t shy away from me and we went with some pretty decent film. I paid them $1,000 and gave them the car for an entire week so they could take their time with it.
They did the back glass all in one piece
I get a lifetime warranty with it through them
They installed air blue 80 for me on the windshield and we did formula one pinnacle on the doors quarters and that big giant hatch. I chose 35% and I think it was the perfect sweet spot. So far it’s been great they did a fantastic job and there’s no bubbling or creases and out here in Phx there’s for sure a difference between no tint and tint on those 110 degree days. It’s definitely hot but what I don’t think people focus on enough is just how much faster the car cools down with some high quality ceramic film.
Long story short anytime someone says vettes are the hardest cars to tint I say “hold my beer” 😂😂😂😂
Love your channel and the high quality work you guys always show and testing tint like this is what helped me pick what I wanted for my car so thank you!
We need some new 944 content! Bring it in for a detail!
You are right about the 944 content.. stay tuned and thanks for watching.
Guessing it has to have a light cycle life. Wonder how long it will actually last? Time will tell. As Always, May God Bless you and yours! 😇
Someone replied that they had a film like this and it stopped working after 2 years
@@BlackoutTinting Good information to know. Thanks for it! As Always, May God Bless you and yours! 😇
You installed it wrong. The fine print states to be installed on the outside of windows.. 😂😂😂 Now you see why there is no warranty..
They included flat glass install directions for an automotive install whereas online they stole the videos from @detroittintstud
I think that's the same issue with those tester tints on glass box with the heat lamp inside and they say it doesn't transmit heat when you touch the tinted glass (and yes you can't feel any heat. 🤔
I believe on the sample test has the tint applied on the inside where the heat bulb is but on a car the heat is on outside, but the tint is applied inside so the application is not the same and so the glass is heated first so the tint can't do it's job.
At least that's my theory.🤷🏻♂️
That makes more since since window is uv protected
My buddy owns a shop and tried to install it on the outside of my 2023 BMW M1000RR Windscreen and he had the same problems on a much smaller piece. The words he used to describe it aren't TH-cam safe is all I'm willing to say about it😜
The same reason why the eye glasses don't get dark in the car. The glass blocks the necessary UV rays
You should send your video link to the manufacturer so they can send it to their engineers. I bet they can work out a solution as it’s probably the plastic that needs improvement vs the technology of shade changing.
I think it was never meant for curved glass
What's frustrating on the tint for my new plastic lens eyeglasses is the tints wear out to clear over time about a couple of years. While my glass eyeglasses I have tint that has lasted decades. I hope the new plastic tint lasts over 4 years.
I like it dark all the time.
Just because it darkens dont mean it blocks the sun uv light
The reason it’s not darkening is because the windshield has us blocking. Same reason why your prescription transition glasses don’t get dark inside a car.
We say this in the video
Yes I was wondering why he installed on inside. That’s one of the reasons I don’t get those sunglasses that automatically darken - they are useless inside a car.
"Us" blocking?
@@johncaruana6406 They don't darken in your car because they aren't in direct sunlight. Inside your car is shade.
@@broderp I think they meant to type UV.
All they need are a few people to buy and its paid for without working.
All modern cars have UV protection on the windows. You need to have the UV to activate the tint. If you've ever bought the auto darkening glasses you know they're worthless when you're driving.
Glass stops transitionlenses from
Even changing color
Not a cloud in the sky......🤨.....☁️☁️😂
Put that transition tint on a window of an older car, so that we can see the effect. Older cars usually don't have window tint, which is why people would buy tint, bonus if it is transition tint. People who can afford a newer car usually don't need to buy tint for the windows because newer cars usually have tint and rear view cameras that can see in the dark quite well. And if they did want transition window tint, they would need to remove the existing tint and replace it with the transition tint. Just need to be mindful of UV blocking window coating and/or laminate. 😉
GREAT idea mate
I got a small sheet to try. Attempted to do motorcycle visor with no success. Would never conform to a mostly flat surface...
Windshield has UV protection.. how you don't know that?
I saw a Maserati quattroporte had it on the driver window, he raised the clear glass and made me wonder how I didn't notice the dark tint.. I saw it like 4 or 5 years ago.. I would keep looking for products because I know they exist for cars.. Good luck
Correct! Typical glass doesn't allow the transmission of UVA, UVB or UVC. Borosilicate and certain specialty glass does, but not windshields.
Great real world video!!!!!
thanks!!
Maybe if you put it on the side windows that doesn’t have the UV properties.
and drove on the other side of the rode after, har har har
whats a rode?@BlackoutTinting
32bit leader in USBC phantom power condensers
Left right Cookie babe, whatever it takes. "Rich Piana"
So I guess it would be perfect for a STORM DOOR 😂😂😂😂.
If it's on the outside of the windshield how would how the windshield is made affect it getting ark or not?
Windshield is blocking too much UV. Film can't be on exterior, it would get destroyed
that guy in the background using a breaker bar to loosen those wheels?
Laminated windows are going to be a problem. Blocks UV. There’s something bigger coming to the industry soon
Hi I was told that you cannot tint your sunroof because of thermal expansion. They said that the glass for sunroof’s are different than the door and windshield and rear glass. Is that true???
Dude the windscreen is laminated, you know what that means right. It is 2 pieces of glass with a layer of UV reducing material sandwiched in between, that is why it is not darkening on the inside of the windscreen. It will work on the side and back windows as they are not laminated. 1st time seeing your channel.
1st time not watching the whole video it seems too
Film needs to be on the outside, windshield has a uv filter coating
Been there done that. Cars windows have UV protection so this product will not work correctly. I’m so surprised at that he didn’t already know that from tinting cars for many years
He literally said that
maybe its an architectural tint film to be applied on building windows from the exterior.
Maybe, but they advertise it otherwise. And even if it is applied to the exterior, it still can affect thermal expansion and damage windows. There's something called a film to glass chart that typically a manufacturer provides to show which film is safe on which glass. Nothing like that with this
since glass blocks UV I wonder if this tint needs to be installed on the outside?
It would not survive and can't even be formed to it
Why would u put it on the windshield? Why would u want your windshield at 25%?
Because it's the toughest piece of glass to do, and the company told us it would work just fine. We were testing the product not doing a real install for a customer
Man you got my hope high I was literally going to call and set an appointment to get my windshield done😢
This company got our hopes up too with their ad!
Took them long enough to invent this 😂
I got rid of my transitions prescription glasses bc they didn’t work worth anything inside a car
Would this work on car headlights? And how durable is it?
Headlights have way too much curvature. Although it would be a nice place for it
My transition glasses will not darken INSIDE a car because the factory glass blocks UV. Unless you install it on the outside of the car, it ain’t gonna work.
Outrageously expensive, impossible to install, and NO WARRANTY.... hell NO I would never think of buying that crap!
Amen
Now double it over
Would cost 2828281 per install
No thank you I will stick with LLumar tint. The clear no heat film is just that clear with little to zero heat from the sun and it has a lifetime warranty!
nice hat! where can i get one?
They bought all the veloce leftovers and reboxed it
!!!!!
you should have tried to put a piece of the film on the outside to see.
It wouldn't solve any problems that way
Did in not work on the windshield?
It did not. As far as we can tell, this stuff was not meant for windshields
You get what you pay for. I paid the extra coin for CERAMIC tint, not carbon tint. The cheap tint bubbles and turns purple. I went 20% because of my lupus, I'm allergic to the UV rays and with the ceramic tint even at 20% I can BARELY tell it's tinted yet from the outside you can BARELY see inside. It's TWICE as much as the carbon tint but worth every penny and has a lifetime warranty, even if your kid cuts it.
20% ceramic tint is definitely the sweet spot
Is it legal to install on the windshield?
Legal to install almost anything on a vehicle, operating it legally is where the law comes in
I'm wondering if anyone can explain what those white fluffy things are in the sky. I've been walking the 🌎 for almost 60 years, and I've NEVER seen those before...🤔🫤🥴🫠
Ever been to PA?
👍🏾
it's probably made for building windows
Probably. But why do they advertise cars, and specifically windshields?
Why didn’t you try the side windows?
because it would be a slightly similar story and we could never sell it on side windows only while neglecting the rear and front shields. So it just didn't make sense
Sorry to hear about your fur baby.
us too
Windows are uv protected. Needs uv to change color.
yes
Interesting
🫡
Guy reads documentation out loud: "this film does not heat-shrink"
Also guy: WTH? This is really weird, this film doesn't heat-shrink.
Lol except they advertise that it does heat shrink and I never said it says not to?
the real question is how long will it last?
We heard 2 years for another brand
@@BlackoutTinting if the customer is ok with it then it's something I would do. it is not the put all film out of business type of a thing either as some say. it is additional.
" there's not a cloud in the sky "...........................
🫣
Windshields block UV 🤦🏻♂️
Yes
You can't tint the Nissan Kicks rear window. Untintable, I'll wait.
Just pay for darker tinted windows and have them installed. Darker hand applied tint winds up looking like shit on 3 years…..
Its been around but not the best into now, what about bright headlights, my glasses darken
it would never form to headlights, lot's of curves going on there
Was this a how not to install video?
Why don't you try? Send us the video of your success
@@BlackoutTinting sure send what you bought
We can't, it's in the trash cause it was impossible to install
Glass blocks 99% of UV light
depends on the glass, but probably more like 98%
@@BlackoutTinting If we want to get technical we can break it dpwn to UVA, UVB and UVC. Regardless, your statement that UV light was responsible for making the tint growing darker, doesn't really hold up given that it is blocked by glass.
@dmc3489 we don't want to get technical, please redact
How do you not know that nearly all car glass is made to block UV?........ it may be a crap product ... but so is your testing of it.
Watch the whole video before you start gnashing
@BlackoutTinting lol... I did.... the only question now is.... why did you put it on the inside of the glass if you knew? Why were you befuddled if you knew? To be honest this seems more like you are pretending to be a fool as an effort to promote the product by being oblivious to the obvious.... if so.... well played
Has no business on the outside or any window
Wait, wait, wait, you install on windshields? Pretty sure that illegal in some states.
It might be illegal to operate it that way, installing it, no
All windshields are laminated lol
Yes
I think your brain is shrunk.
like for real?
Crap..oneday it will be in the glass
Those “transition” or photochromic glasses are near useless.
They don’t darken when you need them most, like while driving on a bright summer day, because they don’t react to what you see, only to when UV light hits them directly.
You’d have to hold them out the window while driving (blindly, without your prescription lenses), then pull them in and put them on for a few minutes while they slowly untint, then hold them out the window again. Rinse. Repeat.
Stupid.
Just get prescription sunglasses as well.
Buy 2 pair and rotate 😂
@@ImAManMann 🤓
transitions
Thank you
How does this guy not know about the uv blocking of a modern car window?
He does, in fact he said it while you were watching him on your phone
How about not being one of the A hole shops that tints windshields! It's dangerous, illegal and rude AF! Blackout Tinting, what state are you in?
Sir, keep your hands on the steering wheel.
The glass has uv inhibiters in it
yes
*Uh Maybe you just wasted 11 minutes of my time I will never get back...NEVER!*
So did you subscribe?
He also saved everyone from having to go and do the same test. 👍
@@BlackoutTinting Thanks for the review.
You are lovingly welcome
Dude admit that you did it wrong
Blastmastershow, just admit it's easy to claim we did
This guy was not doing his best to make this product work.
He is obviously dishonest and cannot be trusted to give you advice of the best window tint material for your car or house.
Having Integrity is a sign of doing good business and receiving excellent customer service.
Personally, this video is not represented properly.
If this tint can work on eye glasses. It can work on car window.
I think you guys not that knowledgeable probably install incorrectly or not for right applications. That company would've been out of business and lawsuits! Call company and talk to customer service see what they say!
Will you fly to us and show us how to do it?
Windshields have UV blockers in them, wont work there.
I thought y'all would know this...
We said it in the video...
❤ Jesus loves you.. Please bring him into your heart before it's too late.. These events are not from climate change.. but from God warning US the time of his wrath is coming... 😢
Please be saved by His Blood, my friend 🙏
I dont like tint...theres a tint that is clear and it blocks UV rays
We sell clear stuff that blocks heat, best part it all costs the same no matter the percentage of tint.
@@BlackoutTinting thanks for info
Know your job and your products before you start talking. windshields have UV filters that's why it's not working. Also heat shrinking distorts vision through the film so it should only be done in the far corners where distorted vision isn't an issue.
Watch the entire video before speaking it will help to make sense. This was not our product and windshield blocking UV was mentioned.
Also I have persinally tinted over 10,000 cars. A good film does not get distorted from heat shrinking.
Cheap
Few marbles short
You have only been tinting for 13 years ???? I got you beat, I've been tinting windows for 40+years !!!!!!
haha, Do you remember the first brand you installed with?