I had to the WD 40 vs Headlights myth to rest. I used WD 40 to clean my headlight on my truck. I felt like the Toothpaste Method for cleaning headlights was a lot of scrubbing. Here is what happened after just a few minutes of rubbing WD 40 on my Toyota Tacoma Headlights!
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I sprayed some in my eyes and now my cataracts are GONE !!
🤣🤣🤣
Rip cataracts
😅😅😅😅
Ha ha ha ha, how could it be......
lol, dont do this at home kids.....
It’s temporary, folks. Check out other videos where they show this. In two weeks your headlights will be hazy again, so you just wasted your time. Motor oil will do the same thing. I tried it on my Jeep and in a few weeks later, the headlights were hazy again. This is a trick dealers use to make a car look good before they sell it. Check out other KZhead videos on it. The solution is to get one those kits and take fine grade sandpaper and sand down to remove the bad, pitted plastic and then apply a coating over it to make the headlights clear again, and will last a while. There’s another video, where a guy takes different grits sandpaper and sands them down and then puts a clear spray coating on it, which is cheaper than using one of the kits. I wish car manufacturers would go back to glass headlights, not this cheap, likely Chinese made crap, that eventually winds up in our landfills.
WD40 does fill the tiny scratches and swirl marks on the surface. But once it washed by soap water or simply evaporates, the swirl marks will be visible again. A bit of polishing + ceramic coating did a longer effect for me.
I used to use Wd40 but than I tried Mothers mag & aluminum polish to remove the yellowing off the headlights, last way longer and work better than WD40.
I sprayed DW40 on my eyes and I can see clearly now!!
R Zarat has the rain gone?
look straight ahead,nothing but blye skyssssssssssss,i can see clearly now,the rain has gone,♪
Cause the rain is gone
Spray on your balls and yours eyes will popup
@@usmanzia9588 😂😂😂😂
As long as no sanding is involved, it'll keep on coming back. It's gr8 for a quick temp fix though. I ain't complainin'!
It's 1:40am with my wife and dog asleep in on sofa beside me and I just watched your video with Bluetooth video and thoroughly enjoying the curious exploration and possible life saving tip if that's all you got in a MacGyver situation! I favor the 3M headlight lens restoration kit that I think was only about $10 at Walmart but I did 3 vehicles with it so only $3-$4 per vehicle as good long term solution but just wanted to say thanks for the mythbusters style exploration which stuff like this bringing tje community together in a good way getting people to positively share their good knowledge and experiences and have some good entertainment along the way is partly what makes life so good!! Thanks again and God bless!
I tried this, but on half a lamp. For the first 15 minutes you could see a huge difference. 3 hours later you couldn't tell. Note that the lamp had already been through standard cleaning.
You need to sand the oxidation off, polish it, and seal it with a UV clear coat for long-lasting results. I restore headlights all the time.
MT thanks for the tip! 🙏🏾
what is your sandpaper spec to grind ? thanks
Na, just blast it with the WD
Video please.
@@amryms8256 Go from 400 to 1500 and then use polish paste on it. I would reccomend 400->800->1200->1500->polishing. I've seen people just do 400->1200->polishing.
It worked. I tried it. But make sure you put the headlight restorer sealant afterwards for a long lasting effect.
Your tip worked so fast and well I was elatated! Just think, if I asked a shop or dealer for help they would tell me I needed a whole new assembly ;) THANK YOU!
the reason why this works is very simple - this fogginess is actually the UV coating of the plastics of the headlight. when your headlight gets foggy it means that the UV coating has gone bad and got really dried out, the reason why WD40 can remove it, is because WD40 is abrasive enough that it CAN remove UV protection coating. HOWEVER when you do this you basically sentence your headlight to death, the plastics will now begin to get dried out by the UV from the sun and eventually will turn yellow and develop cracks until eventually they will just break. so basically if you do this with WD40 you MUST re-apply UV protection coating to your headlights, otherwise the plastics will decay extremely quickly. this is why headlight restoration kits include abrasive material to remove the old dried UV coating and UV coating to re-apply after removing the old dried out UV coating.
Only some kits have a sealer... the one from Meguires does
THANK YOU! I HAD A FEELING THIS TRICK WAS REMOVING SOMETHING THAT IS NEEDED.
Car manufacturers should go back to old days ! Instead of plastic they use real glass on lamp and never had this type problem
My European Cibie Lenses are glass and they are beauties!
lizard944 ain't that the truth. My 65 type 1 has the original glass on it. Still crystal clear after 50 years.
I'm with you old timer!
Totally agree car mfg. have been going on the Cheap for a reason they began to use plastic instead of glass to save cost and to ream the consumer cause the plastic will fade with age and hash heat from the the sun making the car owner having to spend money and time on head light maintenance and hoping you purchase new head lamps ...... :( Cheap bastards !
sorry typo not hash heat lol harsh heat
Awesome! I tried it yesterday on my old Honda CR-V and it is still crystal clear. Thanks man :)
Gonna try it . Thanks for the info. And to your lady.... thaks for keeping him honest and fed.
all it does is fill the microfractures with a liquid that matches the index of refraction of the solid. It doesn't smooth out anything , just masks the cuts. works pretty good though.
Perfectly said
For a week until it wears off
I used WD-40 on my headlights, waited for my wife to bring ME pot roast......NOTHING! I'm calling a fake!!!!
Timothy Brady You sprayed it but you didn’t even buff it you dumb lazy fucker
@@joshcaceres6919 he's replying to the video. That implied you only needed wd40 and a paper towel. You limp dick little youtube Prick.
Agree! I tried this WD-40 trick on my headlights, and I was wondering, if someone will come out with pot roast, maybe my husband, or someone else's wife.... and NOBODY did!
@@valh6203 is that supposed to be funny ??...cause its not even slightly dumbass.
@@victorsmith5699 that’s because you are the dumbass . Go f yourself
"old time, out in the country way." had me right there, subscribe lol.
This guy's enthusiasm is very infectious👍😊
i don't mind wiping my headlights every 2 weeks , its just like a trip to the carwash , less expense, still do the job, lol!!
Noooo weeeiiiii it's gone back to being cloudy the next day!!!!!!!🤣
This is why I like the basic rectangular headlights on my old pickup. When a headlight burns out and needs replacing, I get a whole new GLASS lens and bulb all in one unit. Much better IMO. Those plastic headlight lenses on cars always look like crap after a while.
Its sometimes easier to replace the whole unit and looks good though the other one is dingy looking. LoL
I also put it on the black trimmings on my old truck and it brought it back to life.
I love my car's headlights, the cover is glass not plastic, never get UV fog on them.
Sprays on WD40 - shows excitement - Immediately rushes inside and uploads to KZhead - Eats some pot roast - Goes back out to the car - and.....DOH!
Exactly! Water does the same thing. It takes an abrasive to do it permanently.
It clears the haze until you get the car washed and the W-D40 spray completely washes off. I tried it and it is BS
I guess you never thought of re applying the WD 40 after your car wash..
@@johnhanson1419 But why? You can clean them permanently for a couple bucks.
@@torken87 yeah 2 cans of wd40 and thats price of permanent restoration 😂😂😂
😆👍@@voodooCI
Oh my Gosh! I did not even finish watching your video; I paused and went into my garage. I used WD 40 on my Honda Suv. headlights. It worked! The headlights were just like yours steamy looking. Thank you, thank you!
The WD-40 just fills in and makes the lens look clear, it does not remove any oxidization. When the WD-40 evaporates or is cleaned off, you lens is as cloudy as ever. I don't know why people make videos like this with such stupid wild claims.
Yes it will come back...she had him sussed !!!
Because people like easy stupid fixes that goes away after a week. It's just like rubbing any kind of oil (or water, but water won't stay on for long) Just another video on youtube with great promises. The lens's plastic stays rough and unpolished. Just shiny for as long as the oil will stay. I think the oil on the lens might even heat up from the sun and damage the plastic.
How do you know that genius?actually wd40 eats plastics so if u rub enough it will help. And I know that because I Google it
Actually the WD40 headlight thing comes from truckers up north to keep LED headlights from getting covered in snow. Pam works as well. Lasts about 8 hrs.
Matthew Edwards Considering this trick is a lot older than LED headlights on semi trucks.
This is the used car sales trick before LED bud. The only reason they had to use it on LED was due to the lghts not producing head to melt the snow iff the light. In reality LED is noce, but give me the old fashioned lights for up north hauling..
@@brandoncaldwell95 Old headlights use to put out 50-60 watts power, which melted snow and ice off the glass (not plastic).
I like his enthusiasm , he’s funny with his presentation. Good job sir👍🤓
Yes like a fake Sales Person!
Thanks! My Tacoma is a 1997, so it's even foggier than yours. I was looking for instructions for the toothpaste method, but this looks SO much easier! Gonna go clean my headlights right now.
did it work?
@@ronja5315 It did!
How about after a month
@@hdgshshsgs8657 Hard to say. I live in a rural area and I get quite a coating of bugs on everything!
What’s really happening is that the oily residue from the WD-40 is filling in the micro scratches in the plastic, giving it a somewhat even layer. Therefore the light passing through is more parallel and thus appears to be clearer. This would work with any oil-like substance.
No...its taking off the oxidation caused from sun expisure.
@@NATURALMYSTICMK No.... its really not.
Yep just like polishing a nice car/truck with patina using an oil based cleaner.
i heard it doesn't last...can any comment if its true? also you have to put clearcoat over it . comments please
@@TheFman43 It will last a little while a week or more depending on how much you drive. I wouldn't recommend clear coating this application, save that for a proper sanding/polish kit.
I tried this watching this very video. When finished, it looked great. I turned away for a couple of minutes only to find the glaze had returned just as before.
WD40 IS GOOD FOR A LOT OF THINGS BUT IT WILL NOT FIX YOUR LIGHTS
@@samcolt9394 Think abit out of the box abit . Use clear grease ! Water will bead off it ! Not wash it off Detail shops use it all the time and it lasts !!
My lenses are worse than yours were, I'm glad I found your video! I'm gonna get me some WD-40 tomorrow and do mine! Thanks for sharing this with us! 🙂
Great tip. Saves you from spending $20 - $30.00 on a head light cleaning kit. Also don't want to spend your Sunday afternoon cleaning your head lights, just give it a kiss and promise and your good to go.
It also works good to take labels off your file cabinets. Melts the glue and paper label and leaves no residue.
So does silicone spray. It too removes the glues from stickers without damage.
It might dissolve the glue and paper label but I don't think it melts anything.
don't be shock every oily thing can make it clear but wait for drying and dust
I don't belive in it but if it works than it's ok for dust drying ,you just do it again, it looks like it's 1 minute job .
I’m going to try this tomorrow. Thank you for sharing
Tried this about 5 years ago. It lasts about a week in good weather. If you live in a state where to pass auto inspection you need clear headlights this will work fine too. Poor weather, rain or on dirt roads will cause the wd 40 to be compromised and IT WILL RETURN TO BEING FOGGY VERY QUICKLY . Much better to buy any of the many easily available headlight restoration kits that youL can get at any auto parts store.
You need an abrasive to remove a thin layer of the plastic then apply clear cote to it to seal the deal. It is the UV that causes that fog.
What clear cote would that be?
@@glenndespres5317 clear coat for lights They make specific clear coat for headlights
Need to wet sand with lite grit wet sandpaper spray with soapy water n sand whipe excess plastic sand off, continue process where needed for additional sanding whipe dry with alcohol n microfiber towel than apply clear coat 2-3 applications
@@seanmalone7920 Hey, thanks for the info man. I will give that a try for sure.
Everyone of you is wrong listen to me..if you want it done right u get 600 grit sand paper wet and 1000 grit sandpaper wet polish compound and a 3" buffer so you can work within the headlight. Start with 600 wet sanding with a sponge. sand evenly across the surface removing oxidation and or slight imperfections. After surface is free of oxidation and imperfections move on with 1000 wet with sponge long enough just to remove the 600 grit marks. After 1000 grit finish should be smooth and COMPLETELY free of imperfectionS...Apply compound to 3" buffing wheel or toilet paper if buffing by hand. Continue buffing with compound until desired headlight finish is reached...brand fuckin new
This is what people who stop at intersections and offer to clean stuff should be doing instead of washing windows.
I am going to go try this as soon as I change my headlight bulbs!! I will report my progress shortly!! Thanks for tip!!
WoW!! I tried it and omg it works great! Thank you for the info/video!!!
For anyone who has the foggy headlight problem , rain x makes a paste for that for under ten dollars , works great for about a year and you have to reapply it but it only takes minutes
thank you
Name of the paste?
@@Essenceofbeauty- RAIN X
@@markw6549 I've used New car finish and mother's rubbing compound, they work , but the rain x is an easier product to use
Please which exact one did you use? I checked just now but they have varieties. Can you recommend the exact one for the foggy headlights and for my windshield.... thank you
I used liquid acetate on mine and it actually worked... I used a little to test it out... but the key, once you go over that one surface you can’t go over it again because the acetate will actually smear and that you can never remove. So make sure you go from right to left NO CIRCULAR MOTION.
just use WD-40 lol
Nice......if its real.
I use to detail cars at a an auction a few towns over. Basically what takes place is a cars hood, roof and trunk lid become oxidized. These 3 areas suffer the most from rain, snow and the sun. These ambient conditions hurt all cars and all models. It's best to keep your car in a garage or in the shade if possible. The head lights build up dirt and the sun bakes everything on them and that's why they appear partly hazed, yellow and cracked. WD-40 acts as a moisturizer on the surface. You will still see the haze under the shine. WD-40 cleans off the built in dirt and the silicone fills in the cracks on the surface of ur headlights therefore filling in and shinning up the headlights. No different then a women who puts on foundation then applying makeup, the surface imperfections are still there.. Eventually the WD-40 will fade or wash away with the rain or snow. It's a quick fix for selling a car with bad headlights. Well I hope this helps to better understanding what happens without going to in debt regarding active chemicals within WD-40.
Basically, put new ones in and keep your car clean.........
@@charlesriston8972 Basically right, it's the simplest method.
So it’s like putting on foundation and makeup? So, when it wears off, will it look better or worse than my wife? 🤣🤣
@@dag4836 🤣🤣🤣 you have a great sense of humor. Hopefully better. My spouse doesn't wear any make up, so when we do have an occasion she looks great. She looks great without it, natural beauty works. Happy Thanksgiving to you and family. Enjoy 😉
@@ljaysperspective1775 Happy Thanksgiving! BTW, the wd-40 was the fastest and easiest method even if I have to reapply now and then. The car is older than dirt, 1999 Corolla. It’s a classic now. I just keep propping it up until it won’t go anymore. Lol.
Thank you I was about to go to Walmart and have them clean them you really saved me money I appreciate you
This works for a brief period of time if you don’t seal it immediately afterward. I used Sylvania headlight UV Block Clear Coat to put a clear coat over and prevent it from oxidizing.
agreed
Sylvania headlight UV block Clear coat
I can see clearly now, the rain is gone
Jimmy cliff 😊
Rain washed it all away
I can see all obstacles in my way🎶
🤣🤣
Here is that rainbow I've been praying for.
I just tried this on my 2006 SLK and cant believe the instant results!! ... Amazing!
Thanks for the great hack. I am about to do this on our old Camry.
I use a brass polish on mine. Cleans them right up and lasts a very long time.
What brand did you use
@@putrikrisna1169 It is Weiman metal polish. Clean the lens, apply polish and then buff it off. Works really good!
I'm amazed it worked I also rinsed it off with water and whipped it off several times and took her to a car wash will see if it last if not I will upgrade headlights but so far it's working I'm amazed as much as you are thank you fir the video
Definitely made a big improvement to my driver's side light unit. UK. Give it 9 out of 10. But some of the fogging can also be on inside.
I was truly afraid of driving my wife's 2008 Toyota at night, it was like driving without headlights. Tried the WD40, and just like in this video, INSTANT clearing! I don't know how long it will last, but 5 minutes of minor effort can be repeated every week or every other week for all I care. Dramatically cheaper than replacing the headlights. I have no idea as to what is happening, all I know is OUR driving is a hell of a lot safer at night now.
So...are your headlights clear 3 weeks later or what ?
@@Katmandu2 5 minutes if that ! You gotta change your busy schedule !
蠢逼。。。。
As you go down the road driving, constant wind friction is blowing sand ,dirt, bugs, you name it on the cheap plastic coverings, T his dulling hardly ever happens on cars with real glass coverings! like the 80s and 90s cars!
@@Katmandu2 not worth using wd-40 on the headlights. I'd spend 15$ kits instead of using wd-40 to destroy my plastic headlights and to last for only a week or something
I am an electrician and that’s how we clean old light fixtures.
Theres a difference between this and the $15 kit, the restoration kit will actually work as intended. And if you get one with a sealant it will keep them protected for months.
Wish I could find such a kit for $15 in June 22. Everything has gone up. I saw a slice of apple pie at Piccadilly for $5.30! A SLICE OF PIE, NOT THE WHOLE PIE!!!!
Thank you for the demonstration.
Yes,it`s done in three minutes. And it will last for three minutes.
☺️😂
Yeah its true it's just for the maintime
Two days to be honest
LMFAO exactly.
2000 sand paper. Rub with water. The wash. Then put a 3m compound or any buffing compound. Stay for a year
There is a recall on Toyota Tacoma headlight lens's. The haze and crack from heat. I have a 2011 Toyota Tacoma pick up and the headlight lens's were replaced for free.
Awesome ! I checking that now! Thanks !
I tried it now and it works great. Thanks for the tip 👌👍👏
Wow! Actually worked! Thanks a ton!
I've used transmission fluid on mines a truck car dealer turned me on to iitt years ago and trust me it works and last a long time!!
Thx for that. It didn't look like it would just go back. It look like it stripped the hazy part off. That's what WD-40 does. It strips stuff.
@@mynameisgladiator1933 no proplem!!
Not only does it fix squeaky hinges and clean headlights but it taste good too with roast beef 🥩🤪
This is so True! i already tried it! thanks for sharing
I tried WD40 today on my 15 year old Toyota Yaris. It had dirty headlights and glue residue from Beam Benders. Frankly I was astounded at the result. The headlights now look like new.
Hey, it’s nice to see someone exited about cleaning headlights and a sweet wife that brings pot roast and he loved that too!! Such a nice young couple! It doesn’t matter if it doesn’t last very long, just keep the WD40 handy and clean them as needed, it didn’t take 2 minuets!! Thank you and great tutorial.✝️🙏🏼❤️👋🏼
I tried it on my headlights but no one brought me a pot roast !
Amazing! I have some WD-40 in the cupboard, and I will use it one my headlight and taillights tomorrow, thanks to you my dear!
Omg! It worked! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR POSTING! 😃
country people don''t use paper towels, they would use rags or old torn up cotton clothing and wash/reuse them when soiled
Be an old torn up pair of drawers!
I went to Walmart and bought the Turtle Wax headlight cleaning kit for $10. It comes with cleaners, scrubbers and a clear coat to put over it to keep it clear. It took me 5-10 minutes.
Yeah well I did the same shit but for me, it literally didn't do anything or bare minimum. Useless kit from my experience
@@kerlowkey In my experience, it worked great!!! But it didn't last. I would've had to do it every year, I guess. But the car is gone now. Problem solved. 😆
I do this before every safety inspection here in Europe.. they will fail you for foggy headlights. has been a lifesaver
I can’t wait to try this, Wild!
Water does the same thing until it dries. Oil just takes longer to dry.
Video starts at 1:10 ends at 1:50. The rest is fill. Also, any oil will do this by filling the pores in the plastic. After a wash it will be right back to the way it was.
I hate KZheadrs who lack content and fill it with close ups of their faces, food and general blather. Thanks for the time stamp.
francis white ü7777î
exactly fuck this guy
Lol At least she feeds you before commenting 😂😂😂 that was funny
Brilliant vid - and great commentary - much thanks mate
The first time you wash it, it will be right back & foggy again, temp fix!
Really 😳
I apply WD-40 to my headlights once a week, it's fun making the headlight lens clear plus night time driving is safer too.
Mine are so bad I drive with my bright lights on and it don't blind other drivers, I never get flashed to dim them. But mine are so bad I can't see to drive with them on dim. I've tried the toothpaste and that didn't work for me
Perhaps you should try and get out a bit more, if you think spraying wd40 is fun???
@@royhorwood2663perhaps try putting the shut to the up
Worked on my Civic, lasted about a month, but that's easy maintenance.
Try the 3M 2000 or 3000 grit Wet/Dry sandpaper which is used on clearcoats. Also, use water with it when you sand as it helps flush out the removed plastic from the grit and promote the cutting action of the paper.
If you were to accidentally spray WD-40 on your car paint. It would have a really nice shine for a while before it fills the paint really bad. I wonder what the long term effect will be on the headlight.
wash with soap right away so it wion't stay
This will come back, it's no different to looking at a car with water on it.
Runnin out to do mine now..😄Thank you
Wow awesome In the middle of your video, I got the wd40 and went to my 2006 Chrysler 300 and cleaned the headlights AND IT WORKED!!! Thanks a million!
The world needs more of whatever you're smoking.😱
Legend has it Yak Motley is always so excited because he drinks wd40 ;p
One guy here on KZhead I watched before this one says WD-40, baking soda on half of an orange that was cut in half, and scrub it real well and it also worked great!! 💯👌
I also tried this several months ago and it works great on my 1997 Ford Taurus GL
Try WD-40 on your wiper blades, if they streak. As long as they aren’t cracking, WD-40 will make them like new. Wipe the rubber down good and let them dry. It will surprise you next time you need them.
I tried that a while ago and made viper harder. I will not do it again. Instead, clean with mild dish detergent on regular basis.
Use Silicone lubricant spray and NOT a WD-40 on your wiper blades. Silicone lubricants provide excellent lubrication for rubber. And won't crack the rubber.
*WD-40 will wipe away the oxidation build-up that happens on some headlights but eventually it will return. 3M Auto Advanced Rubbing Compound WILL clean an eliminate the oxidation which is caused by ultra violet rays from the Sun. The only place I've found that sales 3M auto products is Auto Advance stores. Follow the instructions on the bottle its priced at $13-$15 depending where you're located.*
Im from the country dude, and 1st we act better then you and you'll wear your arms out trying to keep them that way.
I like to use Blue Magic metal polish and a paper towel for a quick, easy clarification. Have to redo it from time to time, but it's simple and it works.
It clears the yellow film off very good. The scratches still needs work but my car is a 2008 so the improvement was very evident. I should had taken photos but to be honest I didn’t think it would actually work. Now I can still sand down the scratches and do it faster and easier now the yellow layer is all gone. I did use it on my 2013 truck and it did the lens very well and the headlights look like new.
I tried WD40 and it worked for about 10 minutes. Now I’m going to use Duct Tape, cause I heard it fixes everything except the economy.
Hehe
You can fix just about anything around the house with duct tape and a can of WD40 (in a gravel voice)
Deep woods off
Trade my duct tape for your wd40
My Lollipop I got it from the movie...GET OFF MY LAWN!
Not only is it a temporary fix, it's also a dust magnet.
Carol Stevens yeah and it will make it worest than before
steve B WOREST??? NIGGA WHAAAATTT??? 😂😂😂😂
yeah let it dry before you speed off with your new clean headlights
Carol Stevens / Why do women have to drag men down all the time & bust our balls ??? So its a dust magnet !!! Freakin wash it or wipe it off w/glass cleaner, Debbie Downer !!! Fuck !! Anyone else sick & tired of that ???!!!???
jorge david 😂😂😂😂😂😂
It works for a day or two but once it dries out the haze is back. Progressive sanding and a UV sealant is required for lasting results.
I'm going to try this as soon as I get up u best beleive great video
From what I’m seeing in the comments, WD-40 only fills in the scratches of the headlights and makes them temporarily clear. This is perfect if you’ve made a mistake scrubbing off the oxidation too rough with sandpaper.
Best thing to use is 3M rubbing compound. Used this on three cars and results was much better than using WD40. The rubbing compound works even on foggy headlights that are much worse than yours.
Rubbing compound and progressively finer grits actually repair the damage.WD40 just masks the problem. As soon as it rains it will run off not to mention it ill attrct dust and pollen and look worse. I wouldnt use it. Use a 1000 grit. Take a page from the stone polishers manual.
Just did the 3M rubbing compound today. 100% works
@@ziblot1235 joel
@@ziblot1235 Or use a buffing wheel on a hand drill with a bit of compounding wax
and the kit costs literally 5 more dollars than that wd40, has many applications worth of compound and lasts for 1-2 years (in my experience). This is actually a far more expensive option considering you'd have to do it every 2 days.