Don’t want to replace vinyl top 68 Cutlass S
Don’t want to replace vinyl top 68 Cutlass S
Hey guys,
Had my roof replaced a couple years back and after that fustercluck of a job I have no desire to put new vinyl up there so I’ll be painting it all one color. Obviously now I have gaps where the vinyl once was. Do I have to remove the trim, grind everything down & fill the gaps in? At a loss as what to do here. I’m sure this has been asked before but not recently that I can see. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
—Mango
Had my roof replaced a couple years back and after that fustercluck of a job I have no desire to put new vinyl up there so I’ll be painting it all one color. Obviously now I have gaps where the vinyl once was. Do I have to remove the trim, grind everything down & fill the gaps in? At a loss as what to do here. I’m sure this has been asked before but not recently that I can see. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
—Mango
I think all you need to do is to remove all trim that separated the vinyl from the paint, grind-down the studs that fastened them, smooth whats left w/ mud and paint. I think this is basically just the trim behind the rear window that wraps across the trunk lid.
not sure if its auveco or ? but the little t studs are available aftermarket and the have a small thread on them you turn in with a phllips to attach the plastic clips that go in the trim pieces, or actually snap in to the trim pieces
Or are you referring to gaps in the drip-rail chrome trim where the vinyl was once tucked-under? If so, that's a good question. I think that it would just be a matter of crimping the trim tighter on the drip rails to close that gap. I've never removed the drip rail chrome trim, so I don't know how hard that is to do (or if it is even advisable).
What "gaps where the vinyl once was" are you referring to then? Do you mean "pits" in the roof, A- and C-pillar metal underneath where the vinyl was once glued? If so, then yes, that needs to be sanded and smoothed with body filler. I don't think you need to remove any chrome trim from the drip rails to do that though.
Or are you referring to gaps in the drip-rail chrome trim where the vinyl was once tucked-under? If so, that's a good question. I think that it would just be a matter of crimping the trim tighter on the drip rails to close that gap. I've never removed the drip rail chrome trim, so I don't know how hard that is to do (or if it is even advisable).
Or are you referring to gaps in the drip-rail chrome trim where the vinyl was once tucked-under? If so, that's a good question. I think that it would just be a matter of crimping the trim tighter on the drip rails to close that gap. I've never removed the drip rail chrome trim, so I don't know how hard that is to do (or if it is even advisable).
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mcalvo
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Jun 12, 2014 07:17 AM



