I just replaced all of mine with the thicker IR solar grey from LP Aero. I had an STC one piece sloped windshield from SWTA from 20 years ago. It took a couple of months for LP Aero to get the approval to make the windshield form me. The folks there were really helpful as I had some small issues with the glass not having the perfect curve. I didn't have to do much trimming to the side windows, but a ton to the windshield. I used my router table and a carbide trimming bit in a rip fence. It cuts very cleanly. Now my router table is integrated with a full size Jet table saw, so it isn't going to move or bounce around. I also used a belt sander for fine tuning the edges. With a 36 grit belt, it will remove material pretty quickly. Measure twice, cut a little, measure twice more, cut a little less..... Don't leave any sharp edges, bevel everything including the screw holes. Cracks start easily from sharp edges. I used a countersink to bevel both sides of the screw holes - just a little on the back side, more on the front where the dimpled sheet metal is. Also drill the holes slightly oversize to allow for less than perfect measuring and thermal expansion of the screws. Last tip, if you have stubborn caulk/sealant to remove, don't use a wire or nylon bristle bush in a drill. It will remove the caulk well, but it will also remove the dimpled sheet metal, leaving you a hole that is now too large with no dimple... Don't ask how I know..... Don't be afraid of the solar grey tint - it isn't really tint the way we think of it. What I got from LP Aero looks like 97% light transmissivity. I have not flown the plane yet, still putting it back together from a lot of work this annual, so I can't comment on the thicker glass or the IR reduction. Having someone help hold the glass in place while you are drilling is a big help. I didn't want to end up damaging my sheet metal holes (any more than I already did), so I made a couple of drill guides that worked really well. I bought some aluminum stand offs on Amazon that had the right sized hole in the center for my pilot bit (1/8) I then ground down the end to make it look like the taper on a flat head screw. I then was able to lock it into a needle nose vice grip and put it in the countersunk hole and drill through the plexi. This ensured the pilot hole was centered. I followed that up with the final sixed drill bit with the plexi on my garage. Then countersunk and beveled. I also made a countersink doing the same thing, except I went a step further and epoxied the ground end of the stand off to a #6 beveled washer, That helped keep the guide perpendicular to the glass.
Separate tip. Get some zip lock baggies, 1 for each window. Get a permeant marker. Put a number on each aluminum tab and on the airframe so you can keep them in the right order. Make certain that the number you put on the sheet metal is far enough away from the caulk that when you use the nylon brush I told you not to use, you don't clean the number right off the aluminum.... I hate learning the hard way.... You have to put the tabs back in the original spots because of the little holes in you trim. they are all different. No automated machines built these planes. All done by hand.
I also thought I would be cool and rabbit the edges of the thicker windows so they would be flush fitting like some of the really sweet homebuilts I have seen. Don't. Not only is it time consuming and difficult on curved plexi, my sheet metal had beveled edges which kept my rabbited edges from being flush fitting anyway..
Anyway, I am not an expert on window installation, just sharing the mistakes I made and the few things that went well. Follow at you own risk. I'll see if I can find my homemade drill guides and take a picture. Oh yeah, plexiglass drill bits only. Regular drill bits will bit a pull through to fast. no, I didn't make that mistake.... this time.. ;-)