Hi
I have got the window where I need it and door looks as good as it it did before, so not adjusting that.
Thank you for the part numbers and sticking with me through this ordeal and keeping me from a meltdown.
The vent frame does have the same lean adjustment, towards the bottom and I had marked it all before taking out.
The vent window hits the A pillar nicely.
I pushed in the sinful bulge of felt near the top of the channel and cleaned up the excess glue, so that looks pretty good.
I did trim back both sides of the vertical felt channel near the top, as the top of the vent chrome juts out on the outside and inside too. I left the bottom of the felt channel all the way to the top.
I can't get the gap from window chrome to vent chrome to be as small as yours. The window chrome sits up against the rear of the glass and the glass is up against the bottom of the felt channel, which is set in the vent channel all the way and the rear of the glass is against the top of the rear guide, so I don't know where to get any more forward movement. It is slightly better than last photos from micro adjustments and fussing.
The top of the window chrome follows the rubber seal nicely, so I felt I could move on and started to close the door up and have installed a new moisture barrier, after more fresh grease everywhere. The window goes up and down very fast now and fingers crossed I won't need to be peering into that cavity for many years.
Since my chrome "stop" tab is missing from the top of the window, I fabricated an additional stop onto the lifting rail and affixed an adjustable stop onto the door, so now the window stops on a dime at the right height. See photos of my home made parts. Welded a small metal angle piece onto the lifting rail and found a spare stop that was modified and closed off with a welded half washer, so It can't fall down inside the door if the lock nuts fail to hold it after repeated use that is bolted to the inside door frame with spacers.
I will make a good habit of stopping the window before the very top and nudge the switch button for the final inch, so it won't be hitting at ramming speed going up. Same for coming down.
Next job is the top chrome. Not sure if I should glue the rubber into the chrome and then ease it onto the glass with some lubricant, or put rubber onto the glass and ease the chrome on top of that ?.
I am also happy with the clips to attach the horizontal felts and they hold everything in a good place, especially on the inside. The outer felt could do with being a couple mm thicker. You had mentioned thicker felts coming from MBZ in the US. Do you have a link to purchase them ?. I can now take the outer felt out, without removing the glass in future.
Moving onto the pass. side door window next and the pass. side roof line rubber seal, along with the vent window rubber seal. It was very difficult to get the vent window closed into the new rubber on driver's side. I am nervous to attempt opening it and then closing it with just the turning knob. I hope that it will get slippier and easier once the rubber wears in a bit.