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Hahaha! Nevermind. I finally looked at the link you posted after the stupid response I posted. Didn't realize you replaced the whole tail light. They look great!
 
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Hahaha! Nevermind. I finally looked at the link you posted after the stupid response I posted. Didn't realize you replaced the whole tail light. They look great!
Thanks. I like them. And, like I said, easy plug -n- play. (y)
 
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Thanks. I like them. And, like I said, easy plug -n- play. (y)
Yeah, I replaced the tail lights on my old 2015 Silverado when I had it a long time ago with a similar light as you and it is very easy, but I was hoping for a different solution to black out the tail lights. Such as a tail light cover or a smoke colored film or something of that sort.
 
Yeah, I replaced the tail lights on my old 2015 Silverado when I had it a long time ago with a similar light as you and it is very easy, but I was hoping for a different solution to black out the tail lights. Such as a tail light cover or a smoke colored film or something of that sort.
Check out the VHT tint paint. Theres a lot of videos on it. It seems pretty legit.
 
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I've never used tint paint. I was always afraid it would be too messy.
Painting can be a mixed bag. Ive had some projects that I thought turned out good and others that I didn't like. You could find a cheap light and test it first.
 
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Painting can be a mixed bag. Ive had some projects that I thought turned out good and others that I didn't like. You could find a cheap light and test it first.
VHT looks like a quality product. Might give it a shot.
 
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VHT looks like a quality product. Might give it a shot.
I've used their high temp paint and it seems like a quality product.

You could buy a cheap trailer taillight to practice and get the level of tint you want. Atnleastnit wont cost much to practice.
 
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