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Re: Door Panel Material

To: James Barrett <jamesbrt@mindspring.com>
Subject: Re: Door Panel Material
From: Larry Paulick <larry.p@erols.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2001 09:50:21 -0500
Hi again Jim.  I just did my door panels, and the rest of the car.  For
the door panels, I had an old plastic mat that goes on the floor for
chairs with rollers.  Office type supply stuff.  

It was somewhat bendable, but not a soft material.  I tested it using
spray on adhesive, and the adhesive held the vinyl fine, with the
material stretched over the edges.  I also added a foam material with
cloth backing to give the panel a better feel.

I also added a vapor barrier for added insurance, held to the door with
a roll of mastic, although probably not needed.

Because I needed an access door in the left kick panel for access to the
new fuse box and relays, and a built up area for a larger speaker in the
right kick panel, I wanted rigidity in both panels.  I went to a sign
shop, who had a plastic material that was about 1/8" thick for use in
each kick panel.

This plastic can be molded with a heat gun, and is easy to cut with a
jig saw.  The vinyl also adheres to it using the spray adhesive.

For other areas of the car that use a cardboard panel, upholstery shops
use a cardboard, that has a layer of plastic imbedded in it, that does
not deteriorate or wrinkle when wet like most cardboard.  It is fairly
thick and substantial.  I also used spray adhesive to hold the vinyl on
this material.

Good luck.

Larry

James Barrett wrote:
> 
> Folks,
>         I have replaced my interior door panels several times.
> The pressed fiber boards warp after a year or so here in Florida.
> I have used various types of pressed boards, some prepainted,
> some I added plastic sheeting to.  Also used thin plywood several
> times.  The plywood rots out and comes apart.
>         I have consider plexiglas, lexen and aluminum sheet, but
> these would not allow the vinal covering to be stapled.  Any one
> found an available material that would last for a long time even
> with rain leaking in?  Would like the material to be soft enough
> so I could staple the vinal covering on.
>         As I have a Tiger II the interior is the GT version and
> there are iron sheet metal pieces around parts of the edge.  These
> also rust out, but I can replace those with stasinless steel.  The
> sheet metal pieces are pop riveted on.
> 
>         I noticed that some of the commerical trash cans outside
> my work are Rubbermaid and appear to be made from a 1/4" thick
> gray plastic that has many swirl marks from the molding process.
> It appears to be soft enough to staple to.
> This stuff looks promising, but I have never seen it in sheet form.
> The trash cans are several years old now and they are still OK.
> 
> James Barrett Tiger II 351C and others

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