I think that would start to get messy with bags, I pretty much got it down pat with the system I came up with, only problem is it consumes a lot of containers as waste, but it's working good. it def needs a large container to really expand but now that I'm pouring with funnels for the transfer I'm not having any air bubbles reintroduced problems anymore.
the first set that I thought would be bad because of the bubbles really wasn't even so bad, you don't even really see a few tiny bubbles unless you go looking for them & overall they still look clear & great, but I winded up breaking one of them anyway by dropping it. it shatters like glass & looks like broken glass too. there very hard to trim & deflash because there brittle like glass too, especially when there cold. I got a few chips in the first set too, gotta trim them really carefully.
since then I did 2 more sets & they both came out great with almost no bubbles, just about perfect. this stuff takes up to 7 days to fully cure so handling them beforehand is a little tricky, but I mounted my first set tonight & hopefully the second set tommorow. I blew a gasket on the chamber & have to redo it to cast another set, but overall this mold injection thing is working out fine.
these reflectors are very tricky to install. when the reflector heats up to 90-100 deg F or warmer it gets pliable & a little soft. first they need to be warmed up, installed & secured in place & lined up & formed exactly into shape & into place, then they need a bead of very thick & slow CA glue at the seems from behind & they need to be locked in place with an accelerator spray. then they are installed & sealed in place the same way the tailights are factory sealed & locked togeather, chemically bonded. nothing is visable from the front but this can't be done with thin watery CA like crazy glue or something, that might seep out to the front & then be visable & ruin it. after there locked in place I place the bezel directly in front of a heater on high & bake them at ~125 deg. F for a few hours, then there set & done. I could see guys messing this up, takes a little patience & the right CA glue & accelerator, I'd have to put up decent instructions for install if I sold any sets of these uninstalled.
they really look perfect now, hardly need any polishing at all really but I buffed it a little before removing from the mold anyway, then polish it with a microfiber & then there so glossy, clear & perfect that they look wet. really really nice, smooth, shiney & crystal clear as glass. now I think i'm def happy with them. a few shots...