Discuss washing, waxing and detailing information as well as interior/exterior cosmetic modifications. This includes neons, body, cosmetic wheels, etc. Even under the hood detailing.
Hey, it's functional and no longer a safety hazard! Plus it gives a funky "blast from the early 90's" vibe to the car. Maybe the OP likes pleather? Anyhow, it's another solution to the sagging headliner issue.
A friend replaced his minivan's sagging headliner with gray berber carpet once. It came out pretty nicely.
2012 Chevrolet Cruze Eco - Current car
1999 Buick LeSabre Custom - Former car
Learn from the mistakes of others, that way when you mess up you can do so in new and interesting ways.
LeSabre in Buffalo wrote:Plus it gives a funky "blast from the early 90's" vibe to the car.
Lol well it IS a 92
And I agree with Andrew about the tightness of the headliner, a lil more time would have made it really flat. And how did you attach the pleather to the cardboard? Glue?
The duct tape you have on there will eventually break down, just fyi.
00Beast wrote:Less off-topic than Lane's Heated Steering wheel, but yeah, back to the topic.
Sirius wrote:Think about it. You’re tooling down the road in your Prius, knowing full-well that this thing being green is as big a sham as federally mandated ethanol-enriched gas, Russia pulling out of Ukraine, and Obamacare.
Not sure I would have done it that way, but I'm not going to pass judgment. Back in the late '80s, I almost had my '77 Buick Skylark's headliner redone with a crushed velour upholstery fabric. The upholstery shop guy showed it to me on his own car and It actually looked pretty good, albeit a little different from the original. I ended up getting rid of the car and buying an '86 Cutlass Calais instead.
Daily Driver: 2011 Chevy Impala LT
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
I can finally breath again while driving. I don't know what that stuff was but it's not healthy for the driver. I did a decent job for the cost of the project. If anyone else tries this I recommend folding the liner in half and starting from the middle then working towards the outsides. Also use the spray inch by inch and not foot by foot. The duck take is kind of temporary. I expect the linear to break down over time but when that happens I'll get real glue to keep it in place. Do not use gorilla glue it takes was to long to dry and gets to expansive.
Last edited by SilverBird92/88 on Thu May 19, 2011 1:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
SILVERBIRD1992 Pontiac Bonneville SE.
3800 Tuned Port Injection V6 -135k miles. Kenwood kdc 50w - Soon to be Double-Din Xplod.
6.5 Kenwood 3way Woofers with Xplod Mobile Crossover Network XS-HF58. Stock Tweeters.
6x9 Kenwood 3way Rear Speakers.
Xplod Full Range xm-405eqx Amplifier
THX Sub
Yeah, you've got a lot of out-gassing going on between the vinyl headliner material and the adhesives you used. In addition to a certain level or toxicity, you probably had a fairly flammable atmosphere in the car for a while.
SilverBird92/88 wrote:I can finally breath again while driving. I don't know what that stuff was but it's not healthy for the driver. I did a decent job for the cost of the project. If anyone else tries this I recommend folding the liner in half and starting from the middle then working towards the outsides. Also use the spray inch by inch and not foot by foot. The duck take is kind of temporary. I expect the linear to break down over time but when that happens I'll get real glue to keep it in place. Do not use gorilla glue it takes was to long to dry and gets to expansive.
Last edited by human on Mon Jun 06, 2011 10:21 am, edited 1 time in total.
Daily Driver: 2011 Chevy Impala LT
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
se 3m super 77 spray adhesive. Back in highschool I did my 92 sse. I Cut a pontiac arrowhead out of landau foam and put it under the material. Since I was in highschool, I also put el wire lighting in the inner boarder of the arrowhead and an led behin the fabric in the star. Ill try to dig p some pics, it actually looked pretty sweet. After that I did likt three other peoples headliners. Of course they all wanted velour or fake suade.
I usually worked in thirds to get the best lay. Trying to do microscopic sections make wrinkles a certanty.
Last edited by yourgrandma on Mon Jun 06, 2011 11:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
02 SSEi-Turning money into tire smoke, very efficiently.
Well I always like adding Dynamat to silence the rattles then doing the headliner in suede.....practice makes perfect.... At least you fixed it most people don't even do that,they would rather drive around with the material blowing in their face.But use 3M Spray adhesive next time.....any auto paint store or parts store should carry it.Peace....