Hey lads! Has anyone done a heated windscreen retrofit? Does anything like that exist for the mk3 Leons? I was told that there was a chance but I cant seem to find a part number or how to to the retrofit. TIA
ye but one of the retrofiters told me he can do it but the screen was like 800 quid or something like that. So I thought to ask peope here and see if anyone has heard anything like that. Ty for the reply!Happy to be wrong but I don't think the MK3 Leon came with heated front screen, it uses the Heater to demist from memory.
Seat are now offering it but I don't think it across the range.
This company claims to make heated windscreens that fit Seat Leons
But never heard or seen anyone with one fitted.
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SEAT LEON 05 - HEATED WINDSCREEN
Delivery time can vary between 1 and 4 months, depending on the amount of windows already ordered. Only pickup at Biesheuvel Autosportwww.biesheuvel.nl
Also says Leon 05 - so would presume this is for the Second generation Leon (1P; 2005) Not the MK3.The web page at the link you've posted states ‘pick up only, sending not possible’. Thinking about the practical considerations for UK owners, as this supplying company is based in the Netherlands it might not be a workable proposition for UK owners, especially if a fitted screen sustains damage that’s not repairable and it needs to be replaced at short notice for safety reasons and / or so the car won’t fail an MOT.
Insurance companies would also be unlikely to pay for one of these replacement heated screens if they’re only available from this Netherlands-based supplier on a ‘collection only’ basis. You’d probably just get a standard non-OEM screen from the insurer’s usual approved glass repairers / installers.
Wiring wise it’s easyHere's another place in the UK that makes them, mostly for rally.
https://www.heatedwindscreen.com/pages/faqs#:~:text=Yes we can, just let,with a cost effective solution
They say they can make them for any type of car in the FAQ.
The golf 7 came with the option for a heated windscreen (called climate windscreen), so you could probably wire in your custom made screen, code it and have a clean retrofit. But nobodies done it before as far as I know
Sorry, I must totally disagree with what you've said there - heated washer jets can be a deadly dangerous thing. Imagine you're on the motorway, want to use the washers because you're screen is getting a bit dirty. But the washers are frozen, so nothing comes out. Nothing lost, nothing gained. But with heated washer jets, there is a very real possibliity that you'll get washer fluid out of the jets, which hits the screen, and when the wipers sweep, it freezes and totally obscures your vision. Not what you want at all - my old Granada had heated jets, and after exactly the above happened to me on the m6, the cables for the jets were unplugged and then forever left unplugged.If the cost of the heated windscreen was more attractive like say £500 then I would be interested in having one. Obviously the cost of the rest of the retrofit has to be taken into account @East Yorkshire Retrofits what would your estimate be for this (ball park figure of course)?
I see a heated windscreen as a safety benefit along with heated washer jets.
If the likes of Tyneside Safety Glass were to make 5 off rather than just 1 the cost should be better.
My old C class Mercedes had what I think was the best washer system: the nozzles were heated, but the washer bottle also had an electric heater in the waterSorry, I must totally disagree with what you've said there - heated washer jets can be a deadly dangerous thing. Imagine you're on the motorway, want to use the washers because you're screen is getting a bit dirty. But the washers are frozen, so nothing comes out. Nothing lost, nothing gained. But with heated washer jets, there is a very real possibliity that you'll get washer fluid out of the jets, which hits the screen, and when the wipers sweep, it freezes and totally obscures your vision. Not what you want at all - my old Granada had heated jets, and after exactly the above happened to me on the m6, the cables for the jets were unplugged and then forever left unplugged.
I think we have to disagree on this point here - I personally use a 50:50 screen wash mix most of the year so in the cold months have no fears/concerns about the jets freezing.Sorry, I must totally disagree with what you've said there - heated washer jets can be a deadly dangerous thing. Imagine you're on the motorway, want to use the washers because you're screen is getting a bit dirty. But the washers are frozen, so nothing comes out. Nothing lost, nothing gained. But with heated washer jets, there is a very real possibliity that you'll get washer fluid out of the jets, which hits the screen, and when the wipers sweep, it freezes and totally obscures your vision. Not what you want at all - my old Granada had heated jets, and after exactly the above happened to me on the m6, the cables for the jets were unplugged and then forever left unplugged.
It was in Austria in -23 degrees..... and a heated washer bottle won't stop the fluid freezing in the pipes either. If any fluid is going to freeze at the nozzles, it's going to freeze anywhere in the system, so the need to keep the nozzles heated to prevent freezing there seems a pointless exerciseI think we have to disagree on this point here - I personally use a 50:50 screen wash mix most of the year so in the cold months have no fears/concerns about the jets freezing.
If people are daft enough to run around in winter with just plain water in the bottle then they need a kick up the backside for endangering not just their own but other people's safety if the water freezes on the screen.
As @Seriously? has said, in an ideal scenario an electric heater in the washer bottle would be great on all cars from a safety perspective - just another nice to have retrofit if it were possible.