Kerosene works very well and will not harm the windshield. Brush it on and let sit for a minute, then wipe the tar off. Wash thoroughly with alcohol.
No, this is often confused with the home-spun remedy of rubbing a small, wet bag of tobacco on the windshield, which acts as a fog repellant, similar to Rain-X, but it is not specifically used for cleaning a windshield.
Frt wpr is shorthand for front wiper, which refers to the windshield wiper located at the front of a car that is used to clean the windshield.
First I have heard of windshield washer fluid having an expiration date. If it looks clean and doesn't stink, I'd use it.
You don't clean them - you replace them.
your comprehensive insurance should kick in and about $50.00. If your wanting to pay it all out of pocket $ 400.00. If you get used windshield from junk yard and have someone else install it $ 150.00 to $200.00
You replace it. Check a used auto parts business. Or go to Auto Zone.
It stands for 'before the common era' and is used to replace BC which means before Christ.
unless the knife is really clean i suppose not.
Depending on what you are going to use the water on...
sterile gloves are clean never before used gloves, while non-sterile gloves have been used but are clean
If a clean needle is used (That hasn't been use before) no
Why would you want a used windshield? Broken windshields are covered by your auto insurance. Even if it is not covered, a used windshield is a bad choice. You may break it installing it as installing a windshield on a modern car requires the proper tools and skill. Have one installed by a professional.