If you had to glue two pieces of rubber together forever what would you use ???
For real stained glass, there are specialty stores that sell sheets of glass that you can cut. You'll need a pair of safety goggles to protect your eyes, a tool called a glass scorer to cut the shapes you need, a pair of clamps to break the glass once you've scored it, metal strips to place between the glass pieces (often lead as I recall), tools to sauter the corners together, and as I recall hydrochloric acid to keep everything clean. You'd probably want a large work surface. A table that comes to a comfortable height for you to work at while standing, covered to keep it safe tends to work best (I believe we used leftover industrial carpeting). Start with simpler and/or larger patterns. (Larger pieces are easier to cut than complex small pieces are.) I recommend also working with simpler glass to start with as well, both for cost considerations and because some glass types are difficult to cut. I think the hardest I encountered was cutting a small circle out of mirrored glass. It's very difficult to break without damaging the mirroring. You can get pattern books at the stained glass stores, there's software to help you design it yourself, you can commission designs, or you can look to companies such as Dover that reprint public domain works. You'll find the people working in glass shops to be a wonderful asset. I've never been in a shop that didn't jump at the chance to help a new person in to the art. You could even visit one just to look around and get a feel for costs and environment before you decide if you're ready to start. They're usually happy to answer any questions that come up.
From the pages of the Ca Fire Code 907.2.10.1.2 Groups R-2, R-3, R-3-1, R-4 and I-1. Single- or multiple-station smoke alarms shall be installed and maintained in Groups R-2, R-3, R-3.1, R-4 and I-1 regardless of occupant load at all of the following locations: 1. On the ceiling or wall outside of each separate sleeping area in the immediate vicinity of bedrooms. 2. In each room used for sleeping purposes. 3. In each story within a dwelling unit, including basements but not including crawl spaces and uninhabitable attics. In dwellings or dwelling units with split levels and without an intervening door between the adjacent levels, a smoke alarm installed on the upper level shall suffice for the adjacent lower level provided that the lower level is less than one full story below the upper level.
the first thing Id check would be the door switches.then go from there. id check ALL wiring in and under the dash..if I didn't find it,I would take it too an auto electric shop and have them look at it.