Full glass swap with urethane bond, ADAS recalibration where required, and OEM or OEE glass depending on what your vehicle needs and what you want to pay. Mobile dispatch or shop drop-off at 8529 Willis Ave.
These are replacements, not repairs. Resin can hold a chip together, but once the damage runs to the edge or sits where you have to look through it, the structural and visibility math doesn't work.
A chip the size of a quarter or smaller, a crack shorter than about six inches, damage that sits outside the driver's primary line of sight, and damage that is not at the edge of the glass — these are repairable. Anything bigger, longer, on the edge, or in your sight line calls for a full replacement. Edge cracks in particular are non-negotiable: the glass loses too much structural support to be safely repaired.
We remove the cowl trim, the rearview mirror mount, and any rain sensor or camera bracket attached to the old glass. The old urethane bead is cut and the pinch weld is cleaned and primed. Fresh urethane is laid in a continuous bead, and the new glass is set, aligned, and pressed to spec. Trim and sensors are reinstalled. If the vehicle has ADAS cameras at the windshield, recalibration happens after the urethane reaches safe drive-away time.
"Every modern car needs it" is wrong. Whether your vehicle needs static, dynamic, both, or neither comes from the manufacturer's procedure for your year, make, model, and trim. We check it against your VIN before we start.
A manufacturer-specified target board is placed at a precise distance and angle in front of the vehicle, on a level surface inside our shop. The camera reads the pattern, and the system writes its new reference position.
A scan tool puts the camera in calibration mode and the technician drives a specified route at specific speeds, with clear lane markings, until the system confirms calibration is complete.
If your vehicle requires equipment we don't carry — typically certain European luxury makes — we sublet to a certified ADAS partner and the cost is on the original quote. Never a surprise on the invoice.
If your auto policy includes comprehensive coverage, glass damage is generally covered. The carrier pays the replacement cost minus your comprehensive deductible.
California does not mandate zero-deductible windshield coverage — that's a feature of Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and South Carolina. Some California carriers offer a separate glass-only deductible as an add-on, often set at $0, $50, or $100. Check your declarations page for "glass coverage" or "full glass."
If your replacement is $300 and your deductible is $500, paying cash is cheaper than filing. If your replacement is $1,200 because of ADAS or HUD, filing through comprehensive almost always saves you money. ADAS and HUD jobs almost always exceed common deductibles. More in our insurance FAQ →
Same supplier, same spec as your factory glass. Required for many ADAS / HUD vehicles.
Third-party "Original Equipment Equivalent" — meets DOT, may differ on acoustic / IR / HUD layers.
Meets safety minimums. Fine for older non-ADAS vehicles. Insurance often supplies this by default.
Safe drive-away time depends on the urethane, ambient temp, and humidity. The technician will give you the exact number for your job — don't assume a fixed minute count from somewhere else.
Standard sedan or SUV. Add time for trucks, extensive trim, or rain/humidity sensors.
Most modern fast-cure urethanes in normal Valley conditions. Tech confirms before handing off keys.
Skip auto-wash brushes. Don't slam doors with all windows fully closed. Leave retention tape in place.
Automatic brush wash safe after about 48–72 hours, depending on adhesive and temps during cure.
Mobile is right for most repairs and replacements on non-ADAS or dynamic-only vehicles. Shop is preferable when conditions or calibration require it.
Notice something off? Call within 30 days for the easiest re-bond. A phone photo helps the technician confirm before they arrive.
For deeper coverage on insurance, ADAS, OEM glass, and warranty, see our complete FAQ.