I was wondering if anyone has ever tried to remove the factory cabin side wall vinyl from the old wood and use it over new wood or PVC ?
I'm trying to keep the factory look inside if possible. A heat gun seams to help very little....that is one tough glue!
Bud
Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
-
- Tin star
- Posts: 27
- Joined: Sun Dec 13, 2015 11:53 am
Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
1973 28' Marinette Express Cruiser single 318 engine
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
Don't do that to yourself!
Go find textured pvc panels that they use for restaurant kitchens it's not perfect (like the woven wallpaper look) but close. Otherwise, get thin sheets of pvc and paper them. so much easier than trying to save the wood. They are likely past their life
Go find textured pvc panels that they use for restaurant kitchens it's not perfect (like the woven wallpaper look) but close. Otherwise, get thin sheets of pvc and paper them. so much easier than trying to save the wood. They are likely past their life
2x 1973 28 Express - Single 318
New electrical panels, water system and velvet drive
Miami FL & Catawba OH
New electrical panels, water system and velvet drive
Miami FL & Catawba OH
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
I did it. The trick is to use a utility knife and cut strips, so you are only pullling 3-4 inch strips at a time. Sometimes it tries to pull the plywood off with it, but it can be done.
Steve and Mary Levi
1973 32' Marinette Fisherman
SBC Crusaders
El Ohssa
St. Joseph, Michigan
1973 32' Marinette Fisherman
SBC Crusaders
El Ohssa
St. Joseph, Michigan
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
I replaced the panels in my 1977 and some spots were soft. To me it seemed a lot easier to remove the whole interior than strip the funky whatever it is off the panels. I used 1/4" plywood--while I generally dislike Lowes, they had some pretty nice underlayment that was serviceable--and back-primed it. You can also paint the stuff--I did that on the piece under the front windows and it came out just fine.
Good luck.
Joe
Good luck.
Joe
Joe Napoli
1977 28' Express
Twin raw water cooled 318s
Beaver River--near mile 25 on the Ohio
1977 28' Express
Twin raw water cooled 318s
Beaver River--near mile 25 on the Ohio
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
On my 28' sportsman, I Covered the both bow and main cabin wall panels with white Polywall, FRP ceilings and nautolex floors. May not be orginal but sure looks clean!
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
I used Pollywall to replace the panels in the cockpit and headliner on the hardtop. The 1/4" stuff is much stiffer than plywood and was a challenge to work with though it did end up looking pretty good. I wonder now if painted aluminum panels might be the way to go.
Good luck with your project.
Joe
Good luck with your project.
Joe
Joe Napoli
1977 28' Express
Twin raw water cooled 318s
Beaver River--near mile 25 on the Ohio
1977 28' Express
Twin raw water cooled 318s
Beaver River--near mile 25 on the Ohio
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
When I bought this last fall, did not have any wall panels. I did use 1/4 plywood and covered with vinyl. Just need it to last as long as I do.
- Attachments
-
- smally.jpg (22.54 KiB) Viewed 13069 times
Steve and Mary Levi
1973 32' Marinette Fisherman
SBC Crusaders
El Ohssa
St. Joseph, Michigan
1973 32' Marinette Fisherman
SBC Crusaders
El Ohssa
St. Joseph, Michigan
Re: Removing the factory cabin vinyl from old wood panels
I used Pollywall over existing panels (no adhesive just polyurethane mahogany trim to hold in place), FRP on ceilings and Nautolex floors