Well, I guess I have gotten a bit behind here. It sure hasn't been slow around here, but I haven't posted any progress pics in ages (obviously).
In looking through my pic files I found a nice repair that I had done prior to the grand trip that I had not posted. From the time I bought the Sub, the forward chunk of headliner had been missing. I purchased a complete headliner from a Sub many years ago, but the forward chunk was pretty destroyed. I have patiently searched locally since then for a good forward chunk, but never did find one. Most suffered the same fate as mine did because the forward panel was much larger than the "middle" panels, but not supported as well. This created a situation where they would bow and buckle and come out of the bows and then fall down or break apart and then fall down. Well, I got tired of having no headliner above me so I devised a plan "B".
Before I got started, i pulled the other panels out and added some sound deadener to the inside of the roof panel, reset the original styrofoam insulation (hard to beat the insualting properties of styrofoam) and added some insulation above the front seating area.
This is what the forward chunk of headliner that I bought with the complete headliner looked like. A little too jacked up to deal with:
That pencil line across it is mine. It is the length of one of the middle headliner panels (not the forward or rearmost panels, but the panels in the middle). I then cut the panel on that line to create a template for that little piece with the rounded shape at the front. I then installed a "middle" panel and cut a hole for the dome lamp etscutcheon:
Then I took a bow and cut it down a little (because the width of the headliner is less at the front): The green string represents the difference in width.
Then I laid out the template for the front piece on another "middle panel" and trimmed it out. Then that became my new front piece. There is a little waviness to it from its memory of its previous life as a "middle" panel, but I think it turned out pretty good:
I now have a headliner that is complete and a whole bunch stouter than the original design. The sound deadener and insulation seems to have made a nice difference in interior noise.
In looking through my pic files I found a nice repair that I had done prior to the grand trip that I had not posted. From the time I bought the Sub, the forward chunk of headliner had been missing. I purchased a complete headliner from a Sub many years ago, but the forward chunk was pretty destroyed. I have patiently searched locally since then for a good forward chunk, but never did find one. Most suffered the same fate as mine did because the forward panel was much larger than the "middle" panels, but not supported as well. This created a situation where they would bow and buckle and come out of the bows and then fall down or break apart and then fall down. Well, I got tired of having no headliner above me so I devised a plan "B".
Before I got started, i pulled the other panels out and added some sound deadener to the inside of the roof panel, reset the original styrofoam insulation (hard to beat the insualting properties of styrofoam) and added some insulation above the front seating area.
This is what the forward chunk of headliner that I bought with the complete headliner looked like. A little too jacked up to deal with:
That pencil line across it is mine. It is the length of one of the middle headliner panels (not the forward or rearmost panels, but the panels in the middle). I then cut the panel on that line to create a template for that little piece with the rounded shape at the front. I then installed a "middle" panel and cut a hole for the dome lamp etscutcheon:
Then I took a bow and cut it down a little (because the width of the headliner is less at the front): The green string represents the difference in width.
Then I laid out the template for the front piece on another "middle panel" and trimmed it out. Then that became my new front piece. There is a little waviness to it from its memory of its previous life as a "middle" panel, but I think it turned out pretty good:
I now have a headliner that is complete and a whole bunch stouter than the original design. The sound deadener and insulation seems to have made a nice difference in interior noise.
and I feel for you having to do it in frame, even though my 12v only had 71k on it I went ahead and did a gasket, springs and studs
while it was out, I really cheated and used forklift too......Cummins heads are no joke 
Man, that brought the suck. Oof.