My clock was so fogged and hazed I couldn't even see any of the numbers. I went to Discount Advanced Auto Parts, bought 5 Minute Optical Polish, cost about $10. Just put the piece into a drill, stuck on a pad, slightly wet it, and polished the lens. I tried it, figuring it may not work, but I probably couldn't make it worse. But . . . it now looks brand new, clear as can be. I couldn't believe it, and I'm not the most handy person. I was fully under the assumption that my risk was not that it wouldn't work, but that I would have a drill inside the car and somehow end up with a broken CD player, ripped leather, and cracked windshield. I just taped around the clock so the pad wouldn't touch anything else, then surrounded it by newspaper so nothing would end up through the car. After it worked on the clock, I tried it on an old set of tail light lenses I had, didn't spend alot of time with it, just enough to know it worked on that too. And I didn't tape anything, the pad was hitting the black plastic around the lenses, didn't harm them. The only problem I have now is the clock is 4 hours and 37 minutes off, and I can't change it, and since I've heard they don't keep time well anyway, any idea how long will it be before it's right???? To address comments privately to the moderating team, please address: moderators@xxxxxxxxxxx For more info on the list, tech articles, cars for sale see www.dmcnews.com To search the archives or view files, log in at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: dmcnews-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/