home
Become a Member | Photo Gallery | Contact Us
The Antique Automobile Club of America discussion forum is a FREE online community for those interested in exchanging information about ALL antique, classic, and collectible automobiles. AACA membership IS NOT required to register. Explore, read, contribute, and enjoy!
Search

Participating Clubs
Sponsors







SEMA


Go to SEMA Action Network for the most up-to-date legislative info related to our hobby.

Who's Online
43 Registered (1929model75, 1930, 1937hd45, 24T42, 89REATTAJIM, aacalifeer), 74 Guests and 18 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Stats
27185 Members
91 Forums
120777 Topics
541026 Posts

Max Online: 479 @ 03/26/08 04:18 PM
Need Help?
Lost your password? Can't remember your username? Having registration problems? Answers to many of these problems can be FOUND HERE!
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
Hop to:
#518423 - 06/22/08 01:23 AM Headliner question
wk's_olds Offline
Member

Registered: 06/08/08
Posts: 142
Loc: SE Wyoming
I replaced the headliner in my '51 olds 98 sedan. It's fine, except there are a few small wrinkles that I could NOT get out no matter how I tried! The material is a sort of velvety on the surface, but the backside is kind of like a vinyl. It's very tough, unlike the original material, which was just thin cloth. My question is....can the wrinkles be removed by steaming the thing, or would that tend to make it more wrinkled?? Any help appreciated.

Top
#518457 - 06/22/08 10:20 AM Re: Headliner question [Re: wk's_olds]
oldford Offline
Member

Registered: 06/09/00
Posts: 322
Loc: Hudson, NY USA
The steamers used by trim shops remove wrinkles by shrinking the clothe backing that is bonded to the vinyl. The vinyl then stretches to match the new surface of the cloth backing. Sounds to me that you have just the reverse of the typical vinyl seat coverings. If you have vinyl on the back side of the headliner, my guess is that the steamer will not work. I'm not sure what material you have for your headliner, but most headliners are just light weight cloth with no backing.

Frank

Top
#519200 - 06/25/08 01:03 AM Re: Headliner question [Re: oldford]
wk's_olds Offline
Member

Registered: 06/08/08
Posts: 142
Loc: SE Wyoming
Thanks for the reply! Yes, that's exactly what I was thinking, too. I have a fairly large section of that same cloth which I didn't need to use, so I may try it out on that sample before making the headliner worse!

Top
#519211 - 06/25/08 02:06 AM Re: Headliner question [Re: wk's_olds]
simplyconnected Online
Member

Registered: 11/06/07
Posts: 538
Loc: Detroit (Royal Oak), Michigan
Headliners are supposed to breathe. You sure don't want to trap moisture on the inside of your roof.

As far as heat, my experience is, it shrinks all materials (including steel). Yes, the hot material becomes relaxed, but when it cools, that's when it shrinks. We use steam on convertible tops (on the outside) at the factory. They're vinyl, and their winkles shrink like everything else. Talk with your wife about how to shrink clothes, she'll tell you to use the dryer with plenty of heat. Steam prevents the temp from going over 212F, so it doesn't burn. Some hair blowers get real hot. Try a small test area.

Top
#519430 - 06/26/08 01:07 AM Re: Headliner question [Re: simplyconnected]
wk's_olds Offline
Member

Registered: 06/08/08
Posts: 142
Loc: SE Wyoming
Thanks! I'll give it a try!

Top