...then withdraw and let it heat up again and cure/dry, then repeat.
Thinking About It:
That's giving me a headache just reading about it... Ouch.



Tony
...then withdraw and let it heat up again and cure/dry, then repeat.
working on it wrote:...we do plan to build and poly that whole roof/headlinerseparate, before it gets installed
* As it so happened, I poly'd & painted the interior over a 4-day period in a severe cold-snap (cold for N.Texas), using a space heater to maintain the proper temperature. I would heat it up, then get inside and do a section, then withdraw and let it heat up again and cure/dry, then repeat. It was difficult to do in the cramped 4x8, especially the overhead work.
* The drips from my brush/rollers while completing the overhead work were a real problem, ruining one pair of glasses when I misplaced my safety glasses, and the clothes I was wearing, also were messed-up. My face was half-covered with a vapor-respirator (I wish I still had it, since the COVID-19 appeared), but my skin was dotted with droplets that I was able to clean off before they hardened.
* Next time (if ever) I need to paint inside a confined space, it'll be with full head-to-to-coverage.
erfnie wrote:The router did such a smooth job of cutting the edge off. (I don't know why in the world we waited so long to get this tool!)
tony.latham wrote:In the end, will the headliner end up on the shelf or butt to the walls?
OP827 wrote:The headliner looks very nice. What heavy duty construction adhesive did you use, PL Premium?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests