Junior, what do you recommend as far as adhesive and material for a headliner (assume reusing the original fragile backer board)?
t5montecarlo said:Junior, what do you recommend as far as adhesive and material for a headliner (assume reusing the original fragile backer board)?
Frankly I don't know many local shops that can do heat pressed seams to duplicate the factory look, maybe you have such equipment, you'd be the first local shop I've seen with it, but I don't know you or your shop. The seat cover appears to be a dropped stitch by the sewing machine that caused that, had it happen myself many times in nearly 40 years. The headliner picture you posted looks suspiciously like an old worn out factory unit.JuniorJ said:Randy W said:My '67 has 10 year old PUI door panels and seat covers, never had a problem with the fit, quality or durability. I made my own headliner in the shop and got a Pontiac package tray because I liked the mesh better.
The best seat covers and door panels are the one you make yourself. PUI has been hit and miss from day 1.
seat cover
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headliner
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And I had more pics of the junk from them, but lost the on my old computer.
Randy W said:Frankly I don't know many local shops that can do heat pressed seams to duplicate the factory look, maybe you have such equipment, you'd be the first local shop I've seen with it, but I don't know you or your shop. The seat cover appears to be a dropped stitch by the sewing machine that caused that, had it happen myself many times in nearly 40 years. The headliner picture you posted looks suspiciously like an old worn out factory unit.JuniorJ said:Randy W said:My '67 has 10 year old PUI door panels and seat covers, never had a problem with the fit, quality or durability. I made my own headliner in the shop and got a Pontiac package tray because I liked the mesh better.
The best seat covers and door panels are the one you make yourself. PUI has been hit and miss from day 1.
seat cover
![]()
headliner
![]()
And I had more pics of the junk from them, but lost the on my old computer.
Nobody should mistake relatively inexpensive aftermarket interiors' quality for that of custom made units using heavier gauge vinyls, better threads, etc... But for the original look and cost it's hard to beat the pre-made stuff. It isn't meant for daily drivers, it's meant for restorations. Use it for it's intended purpose and it's fine, take it out of it's intended environment and it isn't.
Another problem is, if you don't live near JJ or me or someone with the background, equipment and experience that guys like us have, you're not going to get great quality custom mades at any price.![]()
the 'felt cloth' is the same type material you used as a kid to make crafts at school. Joann fabrics sell it by the yard.it's easier to find a color that's close to your interior color.they also sell headliner material w/ the foam, but it's 2x more$. just make sure you use the good 3m spray glue. worth the extra$.the felt also doesn't let the glue bleed through like regular material.t5montecarlo said:tell me more about "felt cloth". Mine is in need of doing soon.