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Spray in bedliner on wood?
So I'm going to have my cabinet maker neighbor cut and dado groove my bed wood from all weather plywood or something like that he suggested. I then plan on using a spray in bedliner over the wood and the inside of my stepside bed in order to have a fully functioning pickup. Is there anything I should know about spraying over wood or special prep? Is this even possible with good results? Thanks...Matt
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Re: Spray in bedliner on wood?
Yes, 80 grit is your friend. Check out the second build in my sig
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Re: Spray in bedliner on wood?
Why not use a steel floor then coat it?
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Good luck. Sam |
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I've been giving it some thought and I'm still thinking the wood my neighbor will cut is still less time and money that hunting down, cutting out, paying for, then custom cutting and fitting into my bed a steel floor. Newfishers truck looks just as good and functional.
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Can anyone recommend a good quality spray in bedliner material with a semigloss finish available to the diy guy?
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Mainly so you can get the seams and underside sealed I imagine.
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I have learned when restoring/fixing up etc trucks cars bikes there is a Golden rule: I want it fast I want it cheap I want it good You can only pick 2 |
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Thanks...Post some pics during the process.
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Why not do nice wood and when you use it as a truck throw that piece of plywood in the back so the good looking wood won't get hurt? The wood bed is one of things that make older truck cool. When you pull into to get gas no one is going to say theu did a great job spraying that rhino liner.
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Re: Spray in bedliner on wood?
I agree about the traditional slats and metal looking great. But for those that use the truck regularly it just wouldn't be practical to store and lug a big piece of plywood around and then remove it.
I took will probably do a plywood or metal bed with a liner in mine. |
Re: Spray in bedliner on wood?
one problem with coating wood. You need to make sure that the wood is VERY dry to start and then make sure that the liner totally seals the wood. Do this and it works good.
However, if the wood is wet (green wood) or you dont totally seal the wood then the wood can go to mush. Ask me how I know :lol: If the wood can get wet, the liner will hold in the moister and the wood will just disintegrate. I did this once on a camp trailer, I coated the wood underneath and had linoleum on top. Water being tracked in when raining or spilling a drink got into the wood and the liner kept the wood wet. It only lasted one year. The next season I opened it up getting ready for camping season, took two steps into the trailer and fell through the floor. The wood looked like wet sawdust when I started pulling it apart. When I replaced the wood. I coated the wood on all sides and made sure it sealed well. Lasted 8 years before I sold it. Just a word to the wise. ;) |
Re: Spray in bedliner on wood?
I'd paint the wood black or if its dark, the body color. Black will be invisible and easily touched up. I think the truck in your avatar or whatever would have been black, while later, or at least around '73 body color.
I'd fear bedliner will fail to adhere over time, and plywood will fail, as well as look like plywood. Also, if its a stepside, making oak planks is even easier than a fleet. Plain steel strips are cheap. I think you'll find it pretty easy to snag templates for cutting the planks here, or on the Mar-k site: www.mar-k.com Oak will last 40 years and look good doing it. If you have a woodworker friend or have a tablesaw and router you can get white oak (I think) from a wood supply place, maybe let it dry a bit, trim to width, cut the grooves and trim to length, and apply a finish (not bedliner). How much will the truck spend out in the weather? |
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I know wood is warm and beautiful and all that but I used to have a 71 stepper with a nice oak bed and stainless strips. Truck never did me any good as a truck. It won't see a lot of moisture nor will it be a daily driver but if I want to throw my trash or go pickup an appliance or throw my mountain bike back there I want it to be up to the task. I had thought of using synthetic deck boards like veranda but I don't think they make it in 3/4"?
With that said this is an original 230 inline 6 4 spd truck and want to keep with the original theme. And yes these trucks came with black painted wood floors from factory. |
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