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The WochiTV Privacy Window Glass Film is a no-glue, opaque frosted window tint designed for home and office use. Measuring 17.5 inches by 6.56 feet, it offers exceptional privacy protection, blocks harmful UV rays, and is easy to install and remove, making it a practical and stylish choice for any environment.
J**N
It does things! Like, work.
1. I'm not a professional tint installer, I've done my own tint twice before on smaller windows2. I had my husband's help.3. The tint gets installed on the INSIDE. You don't work outside with this stuff. You'll get dust and dirt under it and it'll be backwards.4. This stuff sticks really well.5. The worst part is being so inexperienced that I can't get all the bubbles out.So, I got the big sheet because we have 2 full size sliding doors on the condo we're renting. They let in GOBS of light. ESPECIALLY after 4pm. The sun hits them almost directly like a pie in the face. I like the view that we have so privacy is kind of a big deal for me because I hate having the blinds closed. So, Picture 1. Half of the sliding door without the tint, the other half with. As you can see, it's super bright outside. This is normal for this area. The tint makes a huge difference. My husband and I took turns walking outside and seeing if we could guess what the other was doing inside the house. We both lost that game but it made for some good laughs and proved a point. You can't see side the house through this stuff. At least during the day. Haven't checked for how it works at night but I close the blinds after the sunset disappears anyway. Long story short, it works.Install! Was not fun. Again, we are not professionals. I used a big 10" window squeegee to help and I had a spray bottle with some water and Dawn dish soap in it. Not sure if that is going to help anyone but it worked better than just straight water (which is what I used doing the smaller window). I feel like if I didn't have my husband's help, this would have been really frustrating and annoying and a much bigger mess. I got some water on the runner in front of the door. Oh well. So, hubby washed the windows, I got the first sheet cut down to size. I left the left and right edges as they were and just cut the length. Had hubby spray the window and pull the film off the back of the tint while I held it up. I don't recommend removing ALL OF THE FILM at once. This tint will static cling to pretty much everything. My pants, the door, the wall, itself. So we did it in sections. Had hubby pull about 2' of film back and I lined it up starting at the top. Kept excess on both left and right sides because we were just going to cut it off later. If you have enough soapy water on the glass, you can actually slide the tint around a bit. This is really nice when you're just starting to do the install. Just try to start with a finished end from the factory as your starting edge. So, lined up at the top, smoothed out to the corners and started heading down. It's not going to be perfect when you first start to put it on. Don't sweat it, just make sure you have enough water on the glass but you don't want it running. That's too much. The mistier, the better. When I got to the part of the tint that still had film, I held the tint to the window (try to keep close to the film when you do this because pulling the film if you aren't holding the tint will pull the tint away from the glass and then you'll just have to go back and redo it) and hubby pulled more film and sprayed more soapy water on the next 2 feet or so. Repeat until you get to the bottom of the glass. This is where you want the squeegee. I started at the top and close to the middle. Since my top edge was pretty good I really didn't have to worry about it. Holding the squeegee at an angle so that the water behind the tint gets directed down was my preferred method. I would always go back to middle and work my way out to the edge. Getting around the door handle sucked. Once I got the left side done, hubby used a straight edge and a really good razor to cut the excess and I moved to the next side. Got that side done and we swapped so that I could get the rest of the little bubbles and junk fixed on the left side and he cut the right then started on the excess on the bottom. That's basically how we did both left and right sides of the door but I lined up the top and the RIGHT side of the tint on the right side of the sliding door, which actually worked out pretty well. We only had to cut the left side and bottom for excess. I spent some extra time with the squeegee once we were done just to try to work out the bubbles.The second picture is after we were done. The lights are on in my house. I left the door partially open so you can see that there's a difference. Definitely going to buy it again so that I can do the other sliding glass door in the condo.
A**K
HARD AF!! to install nicely
Welp, all the reviews I read (about this and other brands) is correct... very, very, VERY hard to install. Assuming you want it to look nice, that is. It is very easy to lift and reapply the film. But when you do you have to douse with water again. Then the water droplets drip and pool down and cause streaks and water drops that show up through the other side. But they don't show up as bubbles that can be removed, it literally looks like I sprayed sticky goo instead of water and placed something over it. You can see all over where the water droplets spayed or dripped. And it does NOT remove with squeegeeing. It looks like little bright spots where you;d think perhaps the film may have been scraped off or little flecks of shimmery something stuck there.So, the squeegeeing...that's another story. If you don't press hard enough the bubbles don't move, but if you press too hard you get drag marks that seem to be slight layers of frosting/matting that have been worn down a smidge, so on the other side of course you see the lines of smudges from the squeegee track lines. And there are shadow marks where perhaps the squeegee wore down the film in spots? Or maybe it's from a spot that was damp instead of wet.The edges are hard to cut. The first film I put using the middle which meant I had excess hanging off the sides and bottom. Well, the edges can't adhere of course when there is pull from the film hanging off, but when you go to cut it because it isn't adhered you can't get an even cut because the film shifts as you move the blade down. The second film I put in I lined up with the top edge and a side edge to minimize the number of jaggedy edges I'd have.The film itself is very, very nice looking. A thick milky white, just as I wanted, not too sheer, but the edges look like crap ( I even used some of the excess film to cut tiny pieces to fill in the jaggedy horror all around the edges), and there are the shadow marks everywhere that I don't know what caused that so I wouldn't even know how to adjust for that next time, I have the shimmery droplet marks and streaks from the water sprayed onto the glass that I wouldn't know how to adjust for next time since I can't pour a bucket of water on it vs spraying the water, and I have squeegee track marks from where the squeegee seemed to very slightly rub off a tiny smidge of the the film texture/colorThese things should come with a small practice square so you can see for yourself the challenges and obstacles you will face so you can figure out how to adjust for that before you apply it for real. I suppose one day I'll reorder, take these off, and redo, but it's too much work to do right away. Took me more than an hour to do two 12.5''x37'' glass cabinet doors. Maybe next time I'll jsut take the doors off so i can pour water instead of spraying to avoid the shimmery droplets shining through
M**
Best product on amazon!!
Amazing product, I actually can't believe how good these are! Honestly, Chinese products aren't always known for the greatest quality but these are insanely good material and useful, I used a Stanley knife and ruler (didn't receive a squeegy) but it was easy to cut out along my window size. I would definitely recommend spraying the window with a little soap water it is a must for it to stay in place. I have in the past thought about buying black out curtains but wondered how they might still seep light in, be more costly and heat the room up if they are thick and you have heating on. For £20 (I bought two rolls) this has done the trick. Genuinely one of the best products I've ever bought from amazon if not the best, really impressed with how easily it applies on and off, and how it can make day time feel like night. Definitely good for people who have trouble sleeping and will be recommending to others. Wow what a great buy!
D**W
Separating the layers is the main issue
It's a cheap and cheerful way to stop light coming through windows or transparent surfaces. The main issue is the separation of the two layers - the roll has a green arrow stuck on that you are meant to pull and voila its as easy as pie. Unfortunately (in our case at least) pulling the tab simply removed the tab. You Tube research showed trying to separate the layers with two tabs at the corner- again no joy. Eventually it was a case of picking at a corner until the two layers separated and this was extremely frustrating! Then came the second application .. no tab this time so we decided to go straight to picking away at the roll. A 10 minute job that takes substantially longer due to the lack of separation- pity the backing layer wasn't scored so that it could be removed by simply bending the stress point.
D**D
Need to use tape to secure in place
I have vinyl stickers on my car window, similar to to old tax disc holders, which can be reused over and over again, so bought this on the same basis, however, I soon came to realize it uses static, not vinyl adhesion, and only able to use efficiently, if it is taped, which sort of defeats the objectThe blackout ability is perfect, so if you don't mind getting shares in the tape industry, this one's for you
J**N
Does the trick
My only criticisms are that I wish the roll was wider and for some reason adhesive tape doesn't want to grip the back.Stuff works a treat. Just make sure your windows are CLEAN AND DRY before applying. Standard rule of measure twice and cut once will see you right.
E**E
Not really blackout, more like dark brownout!!
Good quality product. A bit fiddly to fit, but take your time and its doable. Unfortunately, once in place, it is more like a dark brownout than a blackout!