Since the sunvisors don't rotate in the NC and ND's, has anyone found a good way to block the sun when its hitting side on.
I did come across a conversion to fit an Audi sunvisor for the NC, but I'm not finding any thing for the ND as yet.
I'm not Will Smith so wearing a hat sideways isn't a solution
Block sun from side?
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- Fast Driver
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- bruce
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Re: Block sun from side?
That is a major pain. Maybe pop into a Mazda dealer and sit in a few different cars and see what rotates and might be fitted to the ND?
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Re: Block sun from side?
Not all that hard- you wear a hat with a wide brim or peaked cap with a nice long beak ( like the rappers) or a sun visor like one sees at the tennis. Wearing hats sideways- no problemato . In the early days of motoring it was common for guys to reverse their flat caps rather than have them blow off. I have an NC and hats are standard packing.
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Re: Block sun from side?
I just bought a floppy brimmed hat,with a neckshield from Lowes . Works a treat, t just keep it scrunched up in the car. It might not get a tick from the fashion police however.
- Rocky
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Re: Block sun from side?
Round town I don't have a solution but for long trips I made a set of covers out of fine light-grade shadecloth that slip over the windows and are held in place when the doors are shut. I later bought a set specifically made for the rear doors and modified them to fit the fronts.
Both worked well although I believe front shades are illegal as you wouldn't want people driving around with them in the city - although some of the dark tints I see would be just as bad and have the further disadvantage of being permanent so you have to deal with them at night.
Both worked well although I believe front shades are illegal as you wouldn't want people driving around with them in the city - although some of the dark tints I see would be just as bad and have the further disadvantage of being permanent so you have to deal with them at night.
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- bruce
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Re: Block sun from side?
Maybe half or a third of a window sock would solve the problem?
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Re: Block sun from side?
Sunglasses.
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- KevGoat
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Re: Block sun from side?
My SE just has a subtle tint on the side windows (assume it's not factory but correct me if the SE did come with factory tinted windows) and I find that's enough in most situations with side sun. It just takes that glare and heat away.
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Re: Block sun from side?
My Mazda 6 has a medium tint on the side windows and it is nowhere near dark enough to be comfortable travelling with the sun on the side of the car.
A few hours and you'd be fried. The Missus used to trap a towel in the top of the window to block it out. That was OK on the highway but needed to be removed when you went through a town.
Bruce mentions "window sock". I think we are talking about the same thing, except you can't buy them for front windows. You have to modify the rear-window ones.
A few hours and you'd be fried. The Missus used to trap a towel in the top of the window to block it out. That was OK on the highway but needed to be removed when you went through a town.
Bruce mentions "window sock". I think we are talking about the same thing, except you can't buy them for front windows. You have to modify the rear-window ones.
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Re: Block sun from side?
The amount of sun does depend upon where you live, thus the differing opinions on what works.
- KevGoat
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Re: Block sun from side?
And time of year for that matter. The tint depends on the filters over darkness. Some light tints reduce heat a lot more than darker ones. I know mine reduces the glare and heat more than the darker tint on my wife's Echo. That said, when its over 30° I'd rather take her car any day, the aircon and just general comfort level in those temps is way better.
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Re: Block sun from side?
I find it's the glare as much as the heat on long trips. The eyes get tired from squinting against the glare. Sunglasses only cut out some of it - unless you can wear those radical wrap-arounds that really hug the face. I wear progressive spectacles and so cannot get a close fit in prescription sunglasses as they cannot do the wrap-around thing with prescription lenses, particularly progressives.
Closest thing I could find was those 'overglasses' that go over the top of your spectacles, which aren't all that comfortable for long periods.
Closest thing I could find was those 'overglasses' that go over the top of your spectacles, which aren't all that comfortable for long periods.
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