Board logo

Interior flooring
cerbera - 20/11/12 at 08:18 PM

One of the few jobs I'm doing over the winter is some titivation of the interior. After a failed attempt of spraying the ali panels, I've managed to do a fairly decent job of vinyl wrapping them.
Anyway, I'm after some inspiration of what to put on the floor. I don't want carpet and the only other thing I can think of is rubber mat.
Before buying that I thought I'd ask the collective or ny other ideas.





[Edited on 20/11/12 by cerbera]


macc man - 20/11/12 at 08:46 PM

Alloy chequer plate is a good alternative.


rusty nuts - 20/11/12 at 09:09 PM

Self adhesive non slip decking from a boat chandlers, available in several colours


Westy1994 - 20/11/12 at 09:29 PM

I used vinyl , the stuff you might cover your dash with, works well, looks smart and any water can be soaked up without having a smelly carpet at the end of it. I never see the point of carpet in an open car, especially in the UK.


perksy - 20/11/12 at 09:30 PM

I used cut to shape rubber matting that was velcro backed
Easy to remove for cleaning etc and didn't move around when driving the westy


adithorp - 20/11/12 at 10:04 PM

I used the sort of none slip floor covering you see in commercial kitchens, hospitals ,etc. It's basically lino' with grit in the surface. Hard wearing, non slip, water proof and sound absorbing.


Dale - 21/11/12 at 12:50 AM

What about painting the floor with pickup truck bed liner?
Dale


puma931 - 21/11/12 at 08:02 AM

Did you wrap around the rivets, if yes, was it easy to cover them, as I want to do my interior in matt black.

quote:
Originally posted by cerbera
One of the few jobs I'm doing over the winter is some titivation of the interior. After a failed attempt of spraying the ali panels, I've managed to do a fairly decent job of vinyl wrapping them.
Anyway, I'm after some inspiration of what to put on the floor. I don't want carpet and the only other thing I can think of is rubber mat.
Before buying that I thought I'd ask the collective or ny other ideas.





[Edited on 20/11/12 by cerbera]


cerbera - 21/11/12 at 08:44 AM

Cheers for the replies guys.

I did wrap around the rivets. There's a tool for this purpose which is just a stiff brush. That combined with a heat gun (old paint stripping gun) gave me decent results for a first attempt, although not perfect.

HTH


stevegough - 21/11/12 at 09:02 AM

quote:
Originally posted by macc man
Alloy chequer plate is a good alternative.


I can vouch for this option.

Here you go -
Description
Description


40inches - 21/11/12 at 09:56 AM

I used Horse Box lining, a resin bonded material that looks like short piled carpet. From ebay, about £20 and was enough to do the entire
cockpit, including the back panel.
Description
Description


johnemms - 21/11/12 at 10:51 AM

I have a drain hole in the middle of the front floor panels
& under the seats in case i get caught in a bad downpour..
I use some ribbed rubber sheet cut to size - works a treat.


bi22le - 21/11/12 at 12:40 PM

Nothing?

Just bare metal. Rubber weighs a TON!

If I Had to coat is in something them maybe some non slip paint or self adheisive non slip stuff, like skate tape.


bi22le - 21/11/12 at 12:42 PM

quote:
Originally posted by puma931
Did you wrap around the rivets, if yes, was it easy to cover them, as I want to do my interior in matt black.

quote:
Originally posted by cerbera
One of the few jobs I'm doing over the winter is some titivation of the interior. After a failed attempt of spraying the ali panels, I've managed to do a fairly decent job of vinyl wrapping them.
Anyway, I'm after some inspiration of what to put on the floor. I don't want carpet and the only other thing I can think of is rubber mat.
Before buying that I thought I'd ask the collective or ny other ideas.





[Edited on 20/11/12 by cerbera]



For reference, when I did my side panels I made up a sort of punch tool. It cut the vinly in a circle, dia just bigger than the rivet head. It meant the vinly had no way of peeling back and gave it a nice finish. You can probably see it in my avatar pica or I can take a close up pic if any one is that interested.


welderman - 21/11/12 at 04:14 PM

quote:
Originally posted by cerbera
One of the few jobs I'm doing over the winter is some titivation of the interior. After a failed attempt of spraying the ali panels, I've managed to do a fairly decent job of vinyl wrapping them.
Anyway, I'm after some inspiration of what to put on the floor. I don't want carpet and the only other thing I can think of is rubber mat.
Before buying that I thought I'd ask the collective or ny other ideas.





[Edited on 20/11/12 by cerbera]



looking good there fella

As for floor how about some carbon fiber


Matt_C - 21/11/12 at 04:26 PM

Hi, somebody has already mentioned truck bed liner. Mine is a spray in truck bed liner finish, I think it looks awesome, hard wearing and completely waterproof. There are loads of colours available as well.

It was just masked and sprayed straight in after a light rub to key the powdercoat.

Description
Description


stevegough - 21/11/12 at 05:01 PM

quote:
Originally posted by Matt_C
Hi, somebody has already mentioned truck bed liner. Mine is a spray in truck bed liner finish, I think it looks awesome, hard wearing and completely waterproof. There are loads of colours available as well.

It was just masked and sprayed straight in after a light rub to key the powdercoat.

Description
Description



that looks excellent, but is it really hard wearing??


ptrxly - 22/11/12 at 01:12 PM

A few questions:
What make truck bed liner & did you apply it yourself? Looks great, much better than bare aluminium. What about NVH? (My Busa powered car has lots of panel resonance) 'Any improvements? Also Is it easy to clean?


Matt_C - 22/11/12 at 02:06 PM

The liner I have on there is Line-X, we have it in house where I work and have loads of our products coated in it to protect them. It is very hard wearing, I have seen some of our products that have been left out in the elements for months on end and they appear as good as new. It adds a great deal of strength and rigidity as well as being watertight. (so I still need a couple of drain holes in the bottom of my car to stop it becoming a paddling pool)

http://www.linexnottingham.co.uk/
http://www.aigis.co.uk/line-x
Those addresses are the Line-X we use and what we use it for where I work. It is used on loads of our products to protect the blast absorbing TABRE material we use.

It is sprayed using specialist equipment so it is not a DIY job sadly.


Spud1985 - 26/11/12 at 08:01 PM

quote:
Originally posted by 40inches
I used Horse Box lining, a resin bonded material that looks like short piled carpet. From ebay, about £20 and was enough to do the entire
cockpit, including the back panel.
Description
Description



That's the stuff I just bought to do my interior while the car is off the road for winter.

Did you do the floor in one whole piece, i.e. mould it over the chassis rails??


puma931 - 26/11/12 at 08:23 PM

How much did (or would) it cost to do?

quote:
Originally posted by Matt_C
Hi, somebody has already mentioned truck bed liner. Mine is a spray in truck bed liner finish, I think it looks awesome, hard wearing and completely waterproof. There are loads of colours available as well.

It was just masked and sprayed straight in after a light rub to key the powdercoat.

Description
Description


Matt_C - 27/11/12 at 12:23 AM

All the Line-X branches are franchises so I can only talk for the Nottingham Line-X business (which is actually based in Derby now), I think it is roughly £40 a square meter, sprayed at 2/3mm thick.

If you want an accurate quote for it to be sprayed talk to Simon on the number on the Line-X link above. If you are happy doing a little work and offer to mask it up and key in the powdercoat in the warehouse sure he will give you a better price than if he has to do it. Would only take 5 minutes to spray (and completely dries within 1 minute so it can be driven away straight after) so you would save yourself a bit on labour costs doing the prep yourself.

I did all the prep and masking for mine. In the photos I have posted above, under the line-X I also glued 10mm thick wooden boards against the inside of the SS side panels and caulked all the edges for a nice radius on everything. It makes the side panels feel a lot thicker and more solid.

Description
Description


Mates car done in a dark grey.
Description
Description