Gen Juan Projector Headlight Rebuild

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SVT-SourCream

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As per special request I’ll do my best to build a little how-to here. I would not say this is a hard job but it is not for the impatient or faint of heart. It took me about 12 hours. I went into this project prepared to buy new lights if things went south. I did not plan on doing a how-to so forgive my lack of photos.IMG_4629.png
These were the lenses I used. The clips do not all line up but I broke most of them taking the old lenses out of the housing anyway. Seems to me they are only to hold the lense in place while your gasket cures.

Once the headlights are out of the truck I removed any screws I could find in the back of the housing to make sure they weren’t holding anything together that I might break while pulling the lenses. I used a pretty general guide for removing the lenses from the housing. Here’s the link..


I believe I settled on 235 degrees. I used an oven mitt and some leather gloves to handle the light after it had been in the oven.

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To be clear you will not put it in the oven once and get the lens right off. It’s going to take 10+ times in and out to work the lens loose. I started working on the fatter side of the light (the side that will touch your grill). Just gently prying and pulling. IF YOU HAVE TO USE FORCE, PUT IT BACK IN THE OVEN! I learned this the hard way. The interior plastic trim comes out with the lens and has tabs that go deep into the glue. If you pull too hard you will crack the bezel like I did. (Arrow pointing to the problematic tab)

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A few screws hold the bezel to the lens. Once those are off, customize to your liking! I used duplicolor paint to match my truck, bronze accent to match my wheels and VHT Nightshades spray to darken the sidemarker.

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To be continued….
 
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SVT-SourCream

SVT-SourCream

Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2025
Posts
35
Reaction score
50
Location
Kerrville, Tx
An awesome bonus I did that I highly recommend is etching the projector lens. It looks sick and isn’t visible in the light beam whatsoever. I used this stuff and a stencil I made on my wife’s Cricut to etch my business logo! The lens is pretty self explanatory to remove and you etch your design mirrored on the back flat side.

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NOTE: You HAVE to clean ALL of the old gasket out of the track the lens goes in. This was the toughest part. Several cycles in the oven and lots of scraping with a flathead screwdriver.



With all of that done I reassembled everything the same way I took it apart! The factory screws that hold the bezel to the lens were too small for the new lens so I cut some random screws down to fit and they worked fine.

I used a RTV in a caulk tube made by Oracle to reassemble instead of old school butyl rope (muuuch easier). I got them both done with one tube.
Goop it into the little trough that the lens sits in the squish the new lens into it. Smooth it if you like and MAKE SURE you don’t have any leaks.
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Let them cure for a day and reinstall!!
That’s all I’ve got!:D I’ve had mine in for a few months, cold snaps, hot days, carwashs and even been airborne! No problems yet!!
 

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