When I bought the P500 I got the short wind deflector. It's cold up here and it wasn't deflecting enough wind. Decided to build my own 1/2 windshield. Nice to be out of the wind and still be able to look over the top when the windshield gets muddy etc. It's also the best set up for hunting.
I bought an off-cut of 3/16" Lexan MR10 'Mar-Guard' 24" x 48" (off-cuts were discounted 40%). Decided to mimic the dimensions of the Honda wind deflector so made the bottom width 43". Went up 18" (should have gone 17"...). The pipes narrow about 3/4" per side so I tapered the piece abit. I cut the Lexan on the table saw. If you go slow, it won't chip. YouTube's 'The Emporium' used a heat gun to bend his windscreen. Lexan can be bent cold so I took the sheet to a metal fabrication shop. They used their big press and put a 2" upper and 4" lower bends in (charged me $20). I gave them my Honda wind deflector to get the proper angles for the bends. I believe they were 30 degrees. It looks just like Honda OEM.
I then clamped the Honda wind deflector onto the bottom 4 inches and traced out the contour of the front hood. This was a lot easier than tracing it off the actual hood and avoided all that fiddling around. It worked well. 'The Emporium' on YouTube does a good job of showing how to trace the contour out if you don't have a template like I had.
I used a jigsaw with a fine blade to cut the bottom contour out. Important to clamp the Lexan sheet to your workbench or it'll jump around. Again, if you go slow, the Lexan won't chip.
I used a belt sander to clean up the edge of the Lexan. It did a good job. Then used an orbital palm sander to knock the sharp edges off. I got some 1/2" rubber fuel line, split it and used it as a gasket between the Lexan and the front hood.
I bought four Honda ROPS Clamps from the dealer.
I could have used velcro, or pipe clamps to secure the windshield, but these ROPS Clamps are very elegant pieces of hardware and the windshield can be removed in 30 seconds without tools.
I used stainless steel fasteners. There's a rubber washer under the metal washers; to give the Lexan alittle cushion and hopefully prevent cracking. The Honda wind deflector is painted black around the edge. It makes for a clean look. I'll try to figure out how to paint Lexan (any ideas ?).
Final result is a nice, almost stock-looking windshield. When it comes time to replace the Lexan, I'll have all the hardware. I put the red tape at the top of the Lexan so it would show up on the image. Without the tape, you wouldn't see the edge. Job took about 3 hours not including the travel time to and from the metal shop, plastic shop and fastener shop.
I bought an off-cut of 3/16" Lexan MR10 'Mar-Guard' 24" x 48" (off-cuts were discounted 40%). Decided to mimic the dimensions of the Honda wind deflector so made the bottom width 43". Went up 18" (should have gone 17"...). The pipes narrow about 3/4" per side so I tapered the piece abit. I cut the Lexan on the table saw. If you go slow, it won't chip. YouTube's 'The Emporium' used a heat gun to bend his windscreen. Lexan can be bent cold so I took the sheet to a metal fabrication shop. They used their big press and put a 2" upper and 4" lower bends in (charged me $20). I gave them my Honda wind deflector to get the proper angles for the bends. I believe they were 30 degrees. It looks just like Honda OEM.
I then clamped the Honda wind deflector onto the bottom 4 inches and traced out the contour of the front hood. This was a lot easier than tracing it off the actual hood and avoided all that fiddling around. It worked well. 'The Emporium' on YouTube does a good job of showing how to trace the contour out if you don't have a template like I had.
I used a jigsaw with a fine blade to cut the bottom contour out. Important to clamp the Lexan sheet to your workbench or it'll jump around. Again, if you go slow, the Lexan won't chip.
I used a belt sander to clean up the edge of the Lexan. It did a good job. Then used an orbital palm sander to knock the sharp edges off. I got some 1/2" rubber fuel line, split it and used it as a gasket between the Lexan and the front hood.
I bought four Honda ROPS Clamps from the dealer.
I could have used velcro, or pipe clamps to secure the windshield, but these ROPS Clamps are very elegant pieces of hardware and the windshield can be removed in 30 seconds without tools.
I used stainless steel fasteners. There's a rubber washer under the metal washers; to give the Lexan alittle cushion and hopefully prevent cracking. The Honda wind deflector is painted black around the edge. It makes for a clean look. I'll try to figure out how to paint Lexan (any ideas ?).
Final result is a nice, almost stock-looking windshield. When it comes time to replace the Lexan, I'll have all the hardware. I put the red tape at the top of the Lexan so it would show up on the image. Without the tape, you wouldn't see the edge. Job took about 3 hours not including the travel time to and from the metal shop, plastic shop and fastener shop.
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