DIY Headliner Difficulty

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Status
Not open for further replies.

JRA2000TL

The Complainer
Joined
Dec 29, 2006
Messages
1,675
Reaction score
714
Location
Daphne, AL
I plan on placing an order with stockinteriors.com for headliner material, carpet, and mats soon; but I'm wondering how difficult it is to recover the headliner?

I've heard some say it's not bad and others say that if you don't do it just right, it will wrinkle and look like crap. Another concern of mine is that I have a bad sunroof seal (which I'm going to replace). It has leaked and created water stains on the headliner. I'm wondering if this has ruined the board itself. I can always find a sunroof Taurus at the j/y and pull another headliner board--not a big issue.

I am going to pull the old headliner out and try to remove the existing material and then determine if the board is reusable. A guy at a trip shop quoted me $100 to re-cover it if I brought him the board out of the car. Good deal or do it myself? He doesn't work on cars with sunroofs (but he's a trip shop??? :confused:).

As for the louvered vent shade. I will either remove all of the felt/glue and just paint it gray with the Ford titanium interior paint I have, OR I will pull a solid shade out of a later model Taurus and recover it with my headliner material.
 

-DVP-

NaNaaNaNAAAA!!!
Joined
Nov 12, 2008
Messages
871
Reaction score
837
Location
0 .· ` ' / ·. Full Retard
Cant be that hard. A lot of people have a hard time getting the board out without bending it. I am pretty good at it, not sure why or what makes it hard for other.
 

luigisho

SHO Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2001
Messages
13,265
Reaction score
5,143
Location
va beach,va
Maybe I'm out of the loop but what is a trip shop? Sounds like a place to get blacklight posters.

There should be a few local folks who do automotive upholstery work. I would shop around for price and competency. You can try and do it yourself but, if you want it done well, you might want to pay someone. Preferably someone who has done enough to experience a sunroof or 20 doing this kind of work.
 

kevinspann

Don't take my advice.
Joined
Sep 30, 2007
Messages
3,166
Reaction score
1,884
Location
Richmond VA
I'd get an interior shop to do it. It shouldn't be that expensive. The board is probably OK, but you'll most likely break it in half taking it out (BTDT, and it will probably be harder to find a gen 1 moonroof car)

I'd put a solid shade in it personally, the only thing is, the earlier moonroof assemblies have a dimple in the track that the solid shade can get caught on. I just flattened mine out most of the way with pliers.
 

luigisho

SHO Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2001
Messages
13,265
Reaction score
5,143
Location
va beach,va
I'd put a solid shade in it personally, the only thing is, the earlier moonroof assemblies have a dimple in the track that the solid shade can get caught on. I just flattened mine out most of the way with pliers.

Couldn't you cover a louvered shade flat with vinyl and not mess with the dimpled track, or would that not work?
 

jelloslug

Digital
Joined
Aug 29, 2002
Messages
4,206
Reaction score
388
Location
Greenville, SC
You can recover the louvered shade with the fabric from normal headliner material. The foam will peel off the fabric. I would use carpet tape to hold the new fabric on rather than glue. The fabric is thin and the glue will soak through.
 

Phoenix

SHOHOLIC
Joined
Mar 2, 2007
Messages
3,767
Reaction score
1,646
Location
QC , Canada
If you mean by the that the whole thing (not only the sunroof thing) , its not hard , the only hard thing is to get it out without "cracking" or "folding" it.

Its made with a cardboard like material , if you wrinkle it , well it may look like crap depending on where it happened.

You need to remove all the trims that touches it , including sunvisors - that basically it.
 

kevinspann

Don't take my advice.
Joined
Sep 30, 2007
Messages
3,166
Reaction score
1,884
Location
Richmond VA
Couldn't you cover a louvered shade flat with vinyl and not mess with the dimpled track, or would that not work?

I would prefer a thin piece of ABS to be attached to it first, to cover the louvers, then covering it in material. It's easier to get the solid shade and recover it though.
 

silverknight

i race taurus?
Joined
Aug 10, 2004
Messages
644
Reaction score
96
Location
st clair shores, michigan
did mine in my non-moonroof car, pulling out front seats is indeed the way to go. gives more room to put it on an angle without bending it. i did mine in suede from jo-ann fabrics. looks great. used 3m spray glue in the orange can. no issues.
 

firebat45

SHO Member
Joined
May 7, 2008
Messages
869
Reaction score
472
Location
Edmonton
I would prefer a thin piece of ABS to be attached to it first, to cover the louvers, then covering it in material. It's easier to get the solid shade and recover it though.

How are all you getting the old fabric off? I started stripping one that's flaking, and once I got all the easy stuff off the rest seems to be bonded insanely well. Tried acetone with no luck.
 

sperold

Last to Know
Joined
Aug 25, 2008
Messages
3,753
Reaction score
1,440
Location
Ontario Canada
One hundred bucks is too much if you are taking the board out yourself. That is where the work is.
If you take the seats out, it is guaranteed to come out well. The seats may recline enough to get the job done, but it is risky.
When headliners get old, they seem to decompose into dust. In that state they are brittle and you can break them easily. I would try doing it on a very humid day, or put a tea kettle in the interior for awhile to get the humidiy up, they bend more before breaking that way.
Go the Jo-Anne fabrics route with spray on glue. It will work out fine.
Look it over first, and determine if you can spray it or dye it, instead of recovering it.

I did one in a 91 Tempo and got a headliner from a 93. Believe it or not, the 93 roof is longer, so I had the liner in and out a dozen times.
Everything lined up perfectly, including the grab handes at the back, but it was about 3 inches too long at the back window.
 
Joined
Oct 11, 2004
Messages
4,970
Reaction score
1,456
Location
Cocoa,Florida
sunroof makes it more of a PITA.
Doing the headliner is the easy part,removing the backing and not distroying trim is the hard part.
 

mooseSHO46

Just Hangin
Joined
Dec 7, 2008
Messages
111
Reaction score
24
Location
old bridge, new jersey
Did mine myself when doing a grey interior swap. Getting the the thing out without breaking it was the hardest. I had mine recovered in about 20 mins. came out great, very simple to to do just had to have patience and concentrate.
 

tommyturbo

SHO Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2008
Messages
457
Reaction score
132
Location
California
it's not hard at all, the sunroof just means a few more trim pieces to remove to get the board down. Done it on my tbird with sunroof and on my SHO with no sunroof. Take the front seats out. Use a stiff brush on the board once the old fabric is pulled off, some may be fussy about coming off. do it yourself, the shop may not be careful removing the trim to get the board down. sunroof opening surround just pops off, it has a sticky gooy glue so be careful when putting it back on.
 

kevinspann

Don't take my advice.
Joined
Sep 30, 2007
Messages
3,166
Reaction score
1,884
Location
Richmond VA
I glued paint sticks to the back of my headliner board on either side of the sunroof so it didn't break when putting it back in. It was already weak from being removed.

Worked great, your results may vary.
 

JRA2000TL

The Complainer
Joined
Dec 29, 2006
Messages
1,675
Reaction score
714
Location
Daphne, AL
sunroof makes it more of a PITA.
Doing the headliner is the easy part,removing the backing and not distroying trim is the hard part.

All of the A pillar trim that goes all the way to the rear coat hook is destroyed. I found good non-cracked ones out of a lt. titanium interior GL at a j/y, so I will be installing all new trim around the top including the rear quarter window trim because it's not dry rotted from the sun.
 

JRA2000TL

The Complainer
Joined
Dec 29, 2006
Messages
1,675
Reaction score
714
Location
Daphne, AL
The shop quoted me $150 today to do just the headliner (and I will remove the louvered shade, remove the glue/destroyed material, sand it, and paint it with the Ford titanium paint that I used on my dash cap). I'm going to let them do the headliner for that price. I can handle doing the sunroof shade. The guy told me it'd be best to remove the material down to the plastic and just paint it. They've tried covering those louvered shades on other cars with very thin material, and he said it's a PITA and often doesn't work well/look right.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Forum statistics

Threads
107,077
Messages
1,181,196
Members
16,142
Latest member
Kaevorlly

Members online

Back
Top