by doug hodder » Sun Aug 12, 2012 7:19 pm
Polycarb is 30x more impact resistant than an acrylic and forms/ bends much easier. It can be put in a brake and bent. It does scratch easier, making cleaning of that window a real issue as any material on it will scratch it. Having been in the sign industry though, I'd think that if one were to cover it when not in use, it should last a long while. I've seen signs that I've sold with poly faces in them that are in the UV all day long and they had 15 years on them and were fine. And with a poly window, you can always cut a new one and install it easier. I've had signs that were targets. Poly can take a bullet, only a hole...acrylic will want to crack. There are lots of polycarb products out there....Lexan is GE's copyrighted name for it.
It does expand and contract quite a bit through temperature ranges. I can't remember the exact % however. Considering the size of this window, it may or may not be an issue. Many of the larger signs using poly that you will see around any town, will have a hanging bar on the top. It suspends the sign face....the retainers around the edge only hold it to the cabinet, that way it can expand and contract at will. Kinda like floating aluminum skins on a tear. FWIW. Doug