This as part two of my breakdown on how I refit my door panels. The first part is located here https://www.matthewsvolvosite.com/forums ... =1&t=72918
To continue getting from here
To here
You now have to remove the foam that was "holding" the vinyl to the panel. I found the best way was to use acetone. Got a gallon and used almost all of it. It involves soaking the foam with the acetone and waiting just moments before taking a stiff brush and scrubbing away. Acetone evaporates quickly. Don't use a scraper, or anything sharp because you don't want to mark the panel.
Just keep soaking and scrubbing with the brush until most of the foam is gone.
To remove the rest of the finer foam residue use a 3M scrubbing pad. Pay attention to the outside edge too.
Take time to lightly sand the surface to get the fibers that are pulled up from scrubbing. Dry the panel over night or in the sun before going further. You should have a nice clean surface to work with now.
From here you can go several routes. Re-Vinyl, Cloth, Leather, Shag carpet. Its your preference. Mine was to paint it a similar color to the grey plastic trim interior. I really like grey. I covered the panel areas I did not want to paint. Coated it in primer, sanded, another layer of primer and then two coats of grey fleck paint.
Two coats of clear coat and let dry for a few hours.
Using this method of restoration/refit I ran into a problem I did not plan on. The original vinyl padding was about 1/4 inch thick. When reassembled there was a space between the front half and the back half. Not ideal because air, road noise and light came through. My solution was "D" foam rubber strips. Like this https://www.amazon.com/Dealglad%C2%AE-Se ... ndow+black
I bought mine at Home Depot.
This part is one you must take great care in doing right. I started the strip at the center of the rear portion closest to the door latch. This way I would not see a seam while sitting in the car.
Make sure your hands are clean, the panel surface is clean and that you press the D foam to the panel firmly. Follow the contour of the panel, its not a straight line. Don't get oil from your fingers on the surface or the adhesive will release months later.
Once you have wrapped the foam all the way around where the vinyl used to be make sure you go back and press the D Foam onto the panel, checking fit and finish.
Now reattach the speaker grill. # 10 washers and # 10 3/8" screws were used. I drilled out the old plastic welds on the back of the speaker grill. Don't drill completely through. Make sure you use a bit that is close to the same size as the screw because the plastic is brittle and will split if the screw has to dig in too much. Hand tighten only.
Now to test fit and check for gaps.
The hardest part is gluing it all back together. I used contact cement because it has high temperature resistance, bonds most anything, and can dry without exposure to air. There may be better products out there so use what you feel will work best(Not Liquid Nails).
Do a dry run of putting it all back together to get a feel for what needs to be done. Contact cement is not easy, if not impossible, to reset. Notice where the parts touch and where the green factory glue is. Once you are comfortable, put together the front half and back half first. Apply glue to the green areas and wait for the cement to set. Put the parts together and clamp firmly. This process is many minutes of gluing and waiting. I did mine in cold March and the glue took longer to dry, outside.
The area hardest to get glued was the seam below the door handle. Lots of creative clamping there.
Glue and clamp the Black door panel clips.
Without the foam+vinyl adding 1/4" to the door, the plastic door handle will seat itself lower in the panel and you will have trial and error here. Liberal amounts of glue used here.
A finished product took a day for each panel. Mostly due to the cold weather.
This was a trial and error project and improvements can be made.
I am happy, I have a place for my elbow now!
Thanks for reading. After the third panel I felt like an expert. Hope someone takes this idea and improves on it. Maybe some 98-00 owners will find this useful.
1998 V70XC Door Vinyl Removal and Refit Part 2
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Ludermilch
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1998 V70XC Door Vinyl Removal and Refit Part 2
1998 V70XC
2001 C70
1998 V70R
2000 Subaru Outback VDC
Perception Fontana Tandem Kayak
2001 C70
1998 V70R
2000 Subaru Outback VDC
Perception Fontana Tandem Kayak
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Ozark Lee
- MVS Moderator
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Outstanding!
...Lee
...Lee
'94 850 N/A 5 speed
'96 Platinum Edition Turbo
Previous:
1999 V70XC - Nautic Blue - Totaled while parked.
1999 V70XC - RIP - Wrecked Parts Car.
1998 S70 T5
1996 850 N/A
1989 740 GLT
1986 740 GLT
1972 142 Grand Luxe
'96 Platinum Edition Turbo
Previous:
1999 V70XC - Nautic Blue - Totaled while parked.
1999 V70XC - RIP - Wrecked Parts Car.
1998 S70 T5
1996 850 N/A
1989 740 GLT
1986 740 GLT
1972 142 Grand Luxe
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j-dawg
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You can also rivet those clips back in place. They were glued in from the factory and tend to fall out, but they're strong enough that rivets won't crack them.
1999 V70 T5 5-SPD | ~277k mi | sold
- FLXC90
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Looks good! You could color match exterior paint, add carbon fiber wrap, or whatever. New trend for P80 interiors!
Current Volvos:
1998 V70 T5, 112k sat 5 years, still in mechanical coma (finally at the top of the pile )
2004 XC90 T6 AWD: 186k, 60 on transaxle ( traded in )
1998 POS70 N/A: DD/training aid, 236k but really about 240k, I think...ABS module( passed on to son who sold it)
1998 V70 T5, 112k sat 5 years, still in mechanical coma (finally at the top of the pile )
2004 XC90 T6 AWD: 186k, 60 on transaxle ( traded in )
1998 POS70 N/A: DD/training aid, 236k but really about 240k, I think...ABS module( passed on to son who sold it)
- bmdubya1198
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Very nice! Good solution!
00 V70R Venetian Red/Charcoal M56 Swapped 214k
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
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08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
05 S60R M66
08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
- SonicAdventure
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Great post and thanks for taking all the great photos.
I would love to do this someday when I get some of the more essentials repairs done on my car.
A couple of questions: what was the exact brand of glue you used, and did you do any surface prep to the fiberboard prior to gluing? Also, what type of primer did you use on the exposed fiberboard prior to painting? Do you think this process could be enhanced by brushing a coating of resin compound to the exposed fiber prior to primer and sanding?
lastly, having worked with this fiber, do you think it would be possible to primer and paint the headliner substrate in a similar manner or is that a totally different material?
Thanks
I would love to do this someday when I get some of the more essentials repairs done on my car.
A couple of questions: what was the exact brand of glue you used, and did you do any surface prep to the fiberboard prior to gluing? Also, what type of primer did you use on the exposed fiberboard prior to painting? Do you think this process could be enhanced by brushing a coating of resin compound to the exposed fiber prior to primer and sanding?
lastly, having worked with this fiber, do you think it would be possible to primer and paint the headliner substrate in a similar manner or is that a totally different material?
Thanks
- SonicAdventure
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I know this is an older post, but would this technique work on the headliner substrate?
I have been riding around with a cloth-less headliner for 6 months. I'm not going to pay to have it re-done and a non-sunroof headliner for a wagon it hard to locate. Plus, it's just going to fall down again.
I am trying to figure out the cheapest and most utilitarian alternative to wrap this up. Hate looking at this ugly foam. Thanks.
I have been riding around with a cloth-less headliner for 6 months. I'm not going to pay to have it re-done and a non-sunroof headliner for a wagon it hard to locate. Plus, it's just going to fall down again.
I am trying to figure out the cheapest and most utilitarian alternative to wrap this up. Hate looking at this ugly foam. Thanks.
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wolvengang42
- Posts: 16
- Joined: 11 January 2016
- Year and Model: Volvo V70 2000
- Location: the Netherlands
With deep - deep respect for the unbelievably detailed tutorial in this thread we like to announce that we are working on a sturdy but simple and inexpensive repairkit called PANELPADS to solve this problem WITHOUT having to remove the panels of your car. We found the working principle already, still working on the finishing touch, and we will ship overseas. You can get more information on:
http://www.wolvengang.com/#!commitment-english/oj5uu
Or follow this project on Twitter #panelpads.
By the way, this is no commercial, we are just a bunch of enthusiasts driving 3 Classics in our innovation business network. For that reason we thought we had to be the ones to take the lead in this nasty issue.
ATTENTION! Do NOT try to glue the vinyl back on the panel in whatever way unless you are an absolute upholstery professional! It will do more harm than it will help. Replacement with 'R' panels is another option of course, if you can find them.
http://www.wolvengang.com/#!commitment-english/oj5uu
Or follow this project on Twitter #panelpads.
By the way, this is no commercial, we are just a bunch of enthusiasts driving 3 Classics in our innovation business network. For that reason we thought we had to be the ones to take the lead in this nasty issue.
ATTENTION! Do NOT try to glue the vinyl back on the panel in whatever way unless you are an absolute upholstery professional! It will do more harm than it will help. Replacement with 'R' panels is another option of course, if you can find them.
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wolvengang42
- Posts: 16
- Joined: 11 January 2016
- Year and Model: Volvo V70 2000
- Location: the Netherlands
Hello V70 Classic owners! We have finally launched our Panelpads kit for repairing loosening vinyl coming off from the door panels of the Volvo V70 - S70 - V70 XC Classic (1996 - 2000). Here you'll find all the information you need, Panelpads now has its own subdomain:
www.wolvengang.com/panelpads.
And our production partner ships worldwide
.
www.wolvengang.com/panelpads.
And our production partner ships worldwide
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