1. Types of Automotive Glass
A modern car uses between five and eight distinct pieces of glass, each with specific technical and safety requirements. Understanding the differences is essential for comprehending replacement costs, repair timescales and how the glass behaves in an accident.
Windscreen (Front Glass)
The windscreen is the most important piece of glass on a car. Always manufactured from laminated glass, it accounts for approximately 30% of the body's structural rigidity. In a rollover, the windscreen prevents the roof from collapsing and ensures the correct deployment of the front airbags, which use the glass as a reaction surface to expand towards the occupants.
Modern windscreens frequently integrate rain sensors, ADAS cameras, radio and GPS antennas, heated strips and UV/IR filtering zones. The price of a windscreen can range from 150 euros (simple aftermarket) to over 2,000 euros (OEM with advanced features for premium vehicles).
Side Windows
The front and rear side windows are, in most vehicles, made from tempered glass. When they break, they shatter into small pieces without sharp edges, reducing the risk of serious injury. In higher-end vehicles, the front side windows may be laminated to improve acoustic insulation and provide additional protection against intrusion.
Rear Window
The rear window is normally made from tempered glass and incorporates heating filaments (demister). In some SUVs and estate cars, the rear window can open independently. The presence of heating filaments makes chip repair on the rear window impossible; any damage requires full replacement.
Roof Glass (Panoramic Roof)
Increasingly common in modern vehicles, the panoramic roof can be fixed or electrically operated. It is manufactured from laminated glass (for safety reasons), with solar protection layers that block up to 96% of UV radiation and a large proportion of infrared radiation. Models such as the Tesla Model 3 and BMW iX use a single panoramic glass that extends from the windscreen all the way to the rear window.
Fun fact: An average car uses between 30 and 40 kg of glass. In a vehicle with a panoramic roof, this figure can exceed 50 kg, affecting the centre of gravity and, consequently, the driving dynamics.