In response of one of numerous inquiries I've received on the way I did the hatch glass repair...here's more.
Harvey
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I was VERY careful (and scared the whole time that I was going to crack the glass, glass breaks really easy). So no guarantees...but it worked for me. My frame was slightly less than half the top frame delaminated so it was harder to flex the thin frame to get sealant in. I used a very thin razor blade to scrape as much of the old paint there off as I could. If the paint's not sticking good, it'll come loose soon. And if it don't come off with a razor I figured it still had some life left in the adhesion.
The sealant I used was gastly nasty black stuff that was pretty thin (I think I said that a dozen times already!) and it got on everything it seemed so I spread out a big disposable drop cloth (not plastic) in the trunk, removed all removable pieces of trim (lost a few slotted screws), sat the sealant (same 3m stuff that glass shops use) near the wood stove (or warm spot) in the house for the night to warm it and improve flow viscosity. Used various small syringes that I filled with the sealant...syringes w/long thin tips that I had to clip off to get an acceptable flow and still be able to work the tip into about the center of the glass/frame area...squirted like heck..and it hard pushing it out the syringe tip. (remember I spread CAREFULLY the frame from the glass enough that I didn't want to break the glass but was chancy anyway. then squirted as much as possible so that when I removed the wooden clothes pins holding glass and frame apart (you may have to use something thinner?) it would squish the sealant over the inside. Then I cleaned the extra that squished out off with the cleaner and rags. Just barely spread the trim pieces...don't bend them or it will not be easy to get back into their original place, if ever possible. A new deck is expensive.
BTW before I did all the above, I razor bladed off all the paint I could, then used acetone and alcohol to clean the rest to get best adhesion. Some people use other techniques. I thought of sticking in some 600 grit sandpaper to get something more grip for the adhesive to cling to but there wasn't room really.
So, then, when I got the adhesive in between the glass and frame as best I could, I took out the wooden spreaders and then used some clean wooden clothes pin pieces to sandwich between the small clamps I used to squeeze the frame back to the glass. That is, clamp jaw, clothes pin piece, frame, glass, frame, clothes pin piece, other jaw of clamo. I didn't clamp tight..but just enought to be have a firm connection without risk of stressing the glass at that point and breaking the glass. I think I used 4 small clamps on the top. Oh yeah...I let it sit for a week before using the car. I figured that I wanted a complete cure. Think about it, air cures the stuff and if it's relativevely tight, air won't be getting to it for a while.
I then, after removing more trim, I cleaned and used the remaining sealant around the entire outside and inside edges of the rear deck window just to keep moisture from even entering that area. I spread smooth and into cracks using my finger (and cleaner/rags).
Again, going on a year and nothing seems to have changed. Lots have predicted that it will separate again and I'll deal with that if it happens. I don't think it's going to separate the way I did it. Hope this helps. Good luck. I'm sure that this was easier than pulling the whole window off and "doing it right". Since some of the black primer paint between the frame and glass wouldn't come off easy (I tried), and since I cleaned it good, I'm hoping that I get just as good adhesion as I would have doing it the factory way.
Also, keep lots of adhesive cleaner/remover around and lots of rags to clean up. You won't believe how messy this stuff is. It's thinner than silicone and gets all over.
The fix really looks good now though. Not totally professional but only a glass guy would probably notice.
Harvey