Windshield mounted rearview mirror came off in my hand the other morning. It was mounted in the wrong place anyway and would not allow for full movement of the sun visors. So, time to re-affix.
I have the sticky pad on order from Pelican, but am having trouble removing the mirror from the mounting base? I have removed the screw, but still the thing does not want to budge.
Is there a trick to this?
I was able to use a tube of stuff from my FLAPS to hold the rear view mirror on my 914's brand-new windshield. It has held for ~5 years so far. Not sure if the windshield being new played into it at all, though.
If you've removed the screw that holds the mirror arm onto the mirror base, I'd try wiggling the joint. Someone may have glued it, or it may be corrosion or dirt or some such that is holding the joint together.
--DD
I get the impression from original post that the base is off of the glass, but he's having a problem separating the mirror "stem" from the base.
Another vote for just prying the mirror off of the base. They can stick together.
About four months ago, I found a small bolt on the floor of my car. Had no idea what it was from, so put it aside. Last week as I was adjusting the mirror, it fell off in my hand.
Turns out that it was the mirror bolt that I had found, and the mirror stayed attached to the base just fine for months and miles and many adjustments before falling off.
I still have no idea how the mirror managed to stay attached to the base during all that.
I've never had to separate the two parts to remount a mirror with the sticky mounting pad, & as a unit it's easier to position correctly to not interfere with the visors & for rear vision. No need to separate the two.
The keys are to use the actual Porsche, 3M or known quality OEM sticky pad (cheapos are & always have been out there), & to completely clean the windshield & base with a razor blade & alcohol or adhesive remover, then adhere the one side of the double-stick pad to the base first & smooth & push it down on the base (with the wax paper backer still on the windshield side), then position a few mm's above the glass without touching it, then push onto the glass & slightly wiggle it slightly with medium pressure to get good adherence (not too hard it can break/crack glass).
The big keys with any adhesives are the absolute cleanliness of both surfaces & "only one touch" stick to each surface.
I'd done it a few times in the decade & +/-150k miles that my 914 was my DD!
Good Luck!
Tom
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Years ago, I was told that using two of the adhesive pads would hold it better (to make up for the slight curve in the glass?), and mine's held that way for years.
I went the BMW modified version...and never looked back.( pun intended) lol
Attached thumbnail(s)
Anyone know what year bmw?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Porsche-914-interior-rear-view-mirror-BMW-conversion-/351480575512?hash=item51d5dff618&vxp=mtr
There is always one listed on ebay as long as I have looked.
Thanks for all the info. I have managed to separate the mirror from the base, and (as mentioned) have the OE style sticky pad on order from Pelican. However, I have a new problem.
It seems that whilst my little brother was "cleaning" my bench so that he could re-stain an old set of Bose 901 speakers he "cleaned" the little screw that attaches mirror to base right out of my existence.
Anyone know the size/dimension of that screw or have a spare? I'd like to stay OE on this as opposed to the BMW mirror (realizing I may have no choice now).
Mr. PET says: "pan-head screw AM 2,6 X 15"
That's not familiar notation to me, though. I remember it being a somewhat long screw with a lot of bare shank.
--DD
I don't have the dimensions, but it's about an inch or so long.... no bare shank (by that you mean unthreaded?).
I have one of the BMW conversions for my Six. I have never liked the mirror affixed to the windshield because it makes it harder to clean the windshield and looks better with the BMW part. Yeah, I know.....another mod to my Six
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