If you have ever driven in an intense winter storm or high snow / ice rates you will immediately understand the value of a heated windshield. It becomes a "no-brainer".
true decadence is the heated steering wheel (and heated AND cooled seats) in the new Defender.
Here in Colorado the plows drop pea gravel mixed with a little bit of sand, so you're constantly getting rock chips and stars. I average a new windshield about every two years. After a few months your window looks like it's got glitter all over it from the little stuff that's constantly getting kicked up.Thanks @A.J.M . Great photo of your Disco too -- looks right at home in that stuff! We tend to have dryer weather but as soon as I saw your photo I was reminded of that sticky, melts-then-freezes-and-builds-up snow that I've encountered on a few occasions, and looking back a heated screen would be an asset. If I was in a region that saw that a lot, I can see the value; here it tends to be a bit too dry and cold to get the really sticky stuff. We still get lots of it but for whatever reason it doesn't have that same "build up" effect that the snow type in your photo seems to have.
The way we currently do it is max heat pumped right into the windshield, which tends to do the trick but at the cost of then being unable to send heat elsewhere in the vehicle. No problem in my truck as it's insulated, but in my jeep, with it's uninsulated doors, it made for some chilly drives!
Good point on the insurance thing - I've never had so I had forgotten it as an option. that but it would make the sticker price of a replacement a lot more palatable.
I have this thing called "defrost" that blows hot, dry air over the inside of my windshield, heating it passively, which melts the ice on the outside.If you have ever driven in an intense winter storm or high snow / ice rates you will immediately understand the value of a heated windshield. It becomes a "no-brainer".
He comments a lot that he is vary tall.How in the world does he accidentally hit his knee against the door lock/unlock buttons? My left knee rests at least 3 or 4" behind those buttons (just behind the door lever), and I am no giant. Even if I tried I wouldn't come close to hitting them.
I have this thing called "defrost" that blows hot, dry air over the inside of my windshield, heating it passively, which melts the ice on the outside.
Works great.
Mine is a Td6. No auxiliary heater. If the window is iced up, I use one of these:That works well with a petrol engined car like you all are fortunate to have.
we don’t get many land rovers now with petrol engines.
Disco 3 V8 stopped in 2006. The Disco 4 never got one here.
Diesels take a bloody age to warm up so heated screens help with that.
some come with an auxiliary heater, mine never worked in the D3.
The freeby has an electric heater aid which is great but it doesn’t go fully till the cars moving. Which unless you drive like ace Ventura, ain’t ideal...
Here in Colorado the plows drop pea gravel mixed with a little bit of sand, so you're constantly getting rock chips and stars. I average a new windshield about every two years. After a few months your window looks like it's got glitter all over it from the little stuff that's constantly getting kicked up.
"Why don't you follow farther back," you say? Yeah, with all the transplants from the coasts who are all apparently aspiring proctologists and/or love a bit of vehicular rimming, you often find yourself going backward in traffic from being cut off if you leave more than about a car length and a half ahead.
I’m replacing the windshield on my LR3 when it gets painted this year and it’s about a $188 difference between heated and non heated. Non heated is $430 and heated is $618 both directly from JLR. Probably could get them cheaper from Pilkington.Same here in Alberta. I used to be OK with it because it meant they didn't salt the roads, and I'd prefer stone chips over salt any day of the week, but now the cities are going to salt on the roads and the smaller towns are still using gravel -- literally the worst of both worlds.
I wonder what the price differential is between a heated and non-heated screens? Anyone have experience replacing both on other models? For instance if an unheated screen is $1400 and the heated one is $1600, it's not as big a financial burden to replace as it's only incrementally more, but if a non-heated is $800 versus $1600, then that's another story.
I think it depends. If you have comprehensive they’ll usually cover it. Mine is delaminating I haven’t checked to see if they’ll cover it.Is it a US thing where you don’t have screen cover with car insurance?
I had my heated screen on my Disco 3 changed and it was only £80 excess for the Pilkinton glass.
Are you having to pay full price for a screen change?
As for the scraper thing, being a tad vertically challenged at 5,8 on a good day.
I would have to climb on the tyre and reach in to get the middle. Which was a pain when trying to wash it...