Hey guys,
I know that this topic has been discussed before, but I am the kind of guy who does not take the easy way out. I have a virtually all original 67 Silver L79 SMOG, red line, tinted glass, am/fm, M21, 370 posi, pipes,leather, etc car. The car had one repaint 23 years ago. Completely all original interior - carpet, dash pads, headliner, seatbelts, etc....
I bought the car about 6 years ago, and when I bought it it was wonderful. The bubba I bought it from thought it would be a good idea to wipe it down the night after I bought it (I went back the next morning and paid him and got the car). He wiped the headliner and other items down with Armor All (no doubt). The headliner has sagged. I'm not happy.....
So, I have read tons of archive posts about it NOT being able to be saved. I have read that the foam is shot, that the silicone in Armor All or other like brands has loosened the glue backing and the foam has disintegrated, etc...
The headliner material is perfect - glossy as heck - but perfect. I do not want to just go ahead and get an Al Knoch replacement. I am determined to fix my original.
Also, this comes at a perfect time - as I am judging at a tech session in March for the NCRS and bringing my silver car to assist with the judging and it is going to look great that I show up with a great car with a sagging headliner - but having a 9 month stunning little daughter is tying up a bunch of my spare time so I will not be able to play with the headliner before the event...
So, I am thinking (and I have not done the job before) that I will remove the trim pieces, remove the visors, and drop the headliner down. I will use a soft sponge with Dawn and hot water and wash the heck out of the headliner. Then wash it again, then wash it again. Then source some thin foam padding (I think it's 1/8 inch???) and re-adhere it to the backing board. The trick is getting the original headliner to re-adhere to the new foam and original backing. Contact cement? Gorilla glue? Has to be something that won't bleed through the original vinyl and I have read that 3M super adhesive will not do the trick.
Any suggestions? Any insight? Anyone done the impossible and been successful with this "job". ???
Any help would be so greatly appreciated. I will not stop until the original headliner is hanging, and not sagging, in my car. I am very proud of the car, and that it's survived all these years unmolested. I plan to keep it that way.
Thanks guys.....
By the way, my daughter Ashley was born - on all days - April 27 (4-27) and was a member of the NCRS on 4-28, making her the youngest member of the organization I am sure....We are SO in love with her it's not funny.
Cheers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ARA
I know that this topic has been discussed before, but I am the kind of guy who does not take the easy way out. I have a virtually all original 67 Silver L79 SMOG, red line, tinted glass, am/fm, M21, 370 posi, pipes,leather, etc car. The car had one repaint 23 years ago. Completely all original interior - carpet, dash pads, headliner, seatbelts, etc....
I bought the car about 6 years ago, and when I bought it it was wonderful. The bubba I bought it from thought it would be a good idea to wipe it down the night after I bought it (I went back the next morning and paid him and got the car). He wiped the headliner and other items down with Armor All (no doubt). The headliner has sagged. I'm not happy.....
So, I have read tons of archive posts about it NOT being able to be saved. I have read that the foam is shot, that the silicone in Armor All or other like brands has loosened the glue backing and the foam has disintegrated, etc...
The headliner material is perfect - glossy as heck - but perfect. I do not want to just go ahead and get an Al Knoch replacement. I am determined to fix my original.
Also, this comes at a perfect time - as I am judging at a tech session in March for the NCRS and bringing my silver car to assist with the judging and it is going to look great that I show up with a great car with a sagging headliner - but having a 9 month stunning little daughter is tying up a bunch of my spare time so I will not be able to play with the headliner before the event...
So, I am thinking (and I have not done the job before) that I will remove the trim pieces, remove the visors, and drop the headliner down. I will use a soft sponge with Dawn and hot water and wash the heck out of the headliner. Then wash it again, then wash it again. Then source some thin foam padding (I think it's 1/8 inch???) and re-adhere it to the backing board. The trick is getting the original headliner to re-adhere to the new foam and original backing. Contact cement? Gorilla glue? Has to be something that won't bleed through the original vinyl and I have read that 3M super adhesive will not do the trick.
Any suggestions? Any insight? Anyone done the impossible and been successful with this "job". ???
Any help would be so greatly appreciated. I will not stop until the original headliner is hanging, and not sagging, in my car. I am very proud of the car, and that it's survived all these years unmolested. I plan to keep it that way.
Thanks guys.....
By the way, my daughter Ashley was born - on all days - April 27 (4-27) and was a member of the NCRS on 4-28, making her the youngest member of the organization I am sure....We are SO in love with her it's not funny.
Cheers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ARA
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