een tip uit de US mbt de weerspiegeling:
- Spoiler: Laat zien
- geen zin om te vertalen, :> sorry
GLARE FIX, (for some people at least)
(your results may vary depending on your seating postion, hight , and interior color, but this worked for me)
I was looking at some of the pics from the other threads and I got an idea. Member mass03m3 had reinstalled his vents in the wrong order causing the vent bracket to be behind the dynavin bracket and causing the dynavin to be pitched downward slightly. In his pics he was getting reflections of his interior while I was getting reflections of my back window. What if I could do the same (but install the vents corrctly) and pitch the dynavin down a couple of degrees so it was no longer pointed at the rear window.
The back of the dynavin unit sits on top of the air box so I took out the unit and put a small piece of folded cardboard under the back of it (be carefull to keep it away from the arm and lever noted earlier), this lifted the back of the dynavin about 1/4". Then with a little tweaking (had to bend the dynavin brackets a bit at the screw holes to get the vent fit right) and a little trial and error I got the whole thing to go back together pretty cleanly. Now I get reflections of my black seats instead of the bright sky. MUCH BETTER!!!
You can see in these pics that I just get the window reflection in the very top left edge now instead of the entire top half of the screen.
This of course causes the dynavins fit to be slightly less than perfect but you really have to be looking for it to see the change in angle, ill take the slightly sloppy fit over the glare problem for sure.

At this point I would not reccomend an anti glare screen, after playing with a couple nushield dayvue films and doing the side by side comparisons I have come to the conclusion that the screen protector makes things worse. I am no longer using one but with the screen pitched down a bit my visibility is good. Im not saying its a bad product, it just isnt the right product for the job in this case.
I think this pic shows everything you need to know:
