|
Post by 91Pickup4X4 on Oct 12, 2003 23:03:39 GMT -5
I have been really considering having the floor of my truck lined with rhino liner. I figure it would water proof the floor resist stains and be extremely easy to clean up, plus I thi k it would look pretty nice with my truck being black with grey vinyl interior throughout. please tell me you guys opinion on this. :(or :-/or
|
|
|
Post by 93toyotin on Oct 13, 2003 4:11:27 GMT -5
I too have thought about this and it is a good idea. Although I would get line-x because it is soooooo much better than rhino...
|
|
towin
New Member
Posts: 13
|
Post by towin on Oct 14, 2003 18:15:38 GMT -5
oopps I made a mistake.. I put bed liner inside my truck to do the same thing, I bought it from walmart, it's not cheap shit they sell it there a little cheaper than the bedl liners stores,
|
|
|
Post by 86taco on Oct 20, 2003 19:30:38 GMT -5
I think it would be a great idea. I know of a guy that rhino lined the whole outside of his truck and underneath in the red. It looked nice. dont have to worry about scratched when wheeling. Not that I do either my truck has been wearing flat black for 2yrs.
|
|
|
Post by bikeguy18974 on Oct 21, 2003 2:02:02 GMT -5
i put herculiner from the rear of the front seats back in my 4runner, and i used the walmart stuff the get into the nooks and crannies (spray can). both seem to work well. The walmart stuff (made by duplicolor) stinks though. By stinks I mean smells. It took three weeks for most of the smell to disappear. The herculiner didn't smell after 48 hours and looks performed really well.
Search the net as there are lots of options available these days. You can get the stuff in smooth finish in a variety of colors, or with the 'grit'. Heck there is even a place that sells a glow in the dark version.
|
|
|
Post by toy94x4 on Oct 21, 2003 2:14:59 GMT -5
Lining the interior of the truck should work great to prevent corrosion of any kind from water and mud. Plus it looks great doing it. Might want to leave one or two of the drain holes open to allow for drainage if you weren't already going to do that. The duplicolor from wal-mart in the can might work well as I have not tried it... but I used the same product for my bed except that I bought the jug and rolled it on. I am severly disappointed in it's performance as I have many scratches and the bed is exposed in those areas. I'm eventually going to remove the dupli-color and apply a Herculiner.
|
|
|
Post by carlos4x4sand on Nov 18, 2003 2:46:33 GMT -5
Hey bikeguy, does that sparycan liner really work??
|
|
|
Post by bikeguy18974 on Nov 18, 2003 5:42:16 GMT -5
Carlos I would go with toy94's results on the duplicolor liner (spray or can). The spray stuff is the same as the gallon can. He said it scratched off.
I don't have a sprayer and used the hurculiner for the majority of my work. It works good, even after sliding lots of heavy hard stuff over it when moving.
I only used the spray can stuff for the inside of the wheelwells where I couldn't brush in the hurculiner. I only used the spray for waterproofing purposes, it works fine for that.
I guess it depends on what you want it for. Eventually I plan on trying durabak for my whole exterior.
|
|