SirReal63
Full Access Member
The dash pad, it has a crack that is pretty bad. I was going to just buy one of the covers they sell but after having to sand the texture off the crash pad replacement I didn't want to do that until I tried to repair what I had. The pad is in decent shape, minus the crack, and I figured I had nothing to lose.
The problem, the crack has become quite large, the foam under it rotted and the broken edges turned up. I considered just sanding it flat and going from there, but this piece can and will move again with nothing to hold it into place.
I decided the right way to keep it from opening up again and ruining any "repair" job was to ensure it would not be able to move much, or any. I mixed up some black epoxy and poured it into the crack in hopes the epoxy would soak into the foam and secure it to the hard foam base. To keep it held down I clamped some wood to it and put enough pressure in it to ensure I was left with a solid depression to fill.
The blue material is a silicone putty used for making molds, I really wanted to duplicate the factory texture. In the end I was unable to put the factory texture on the repair, though the mold was correct it ended up looking worse than I had imagined.
I used short strand fiberglass for the bulk of the repair and UV putty to fine tune it. This was in process but I have no idea which of the numerous coats this was, there were a lot.
The failed texture, it was difficult to see until some color was on it.
Once I had it where I thought I was happy with it, I used the same U-Pol flat black as on the dash pieces, ordered up another can of the SprayMax Matte 2K clear and began spraying. This was a mess, I have used quite a few cans of the SprayMax product now, every can sprayed perfectly, this one did not, it came out of the can too thick and the pattern too narrow. I flipped the can over and deciphered the date code, it was 4.5 years old. It did dry, but was ugly. The seller would only refund my money and would not ship out a fresh can, it took over a week just to get the clear straightened out. I assume some responsibility here, I never thought to check the date on the can, they are really only good up to 3 years from the date of filling, 4.5 years is way too old. Not the end of the world, but a time delay and annoyance.
The "finished" product, it came out better than I expected in all reality. It is not perfect, it still has a small depression where the repair is but you have to be at the right angle to see it and looks a whole lot better than the crack did.
I have a dusting issue that only shows up in this angle so I will need to do a little fine sanding to remove the dust texture.
It was really difficult to get the pad back into the slots by the windshield, it will need to come back out so I decipher what is wrong. The front is not down correctly in the pics above but I am not going to do this for a while, I am tired of working on the dash.
Since I had time while waiting on clear for the pad, I did some fine tuning on the ash plastic. I noticed the flat panel wasn't in a perfect plane with the rest of the dash plastic, the place where the left side of the flat panel attached was missing a speed nut and the plastic broken. There was no putting the original plastic back enough to hold the speed nut so I bent some ABS to fit and went over the top and to the underside. It took a little trimming but I got the panel mounting working and won't break again so easily.
With everything done I think it all turned out pretty good, it needs a good cleaning to remove finger/hand prints but I won't do that until I correct the dash pad fitment.
Next on the project list is replacing the 87-88 throttle body with the correct 89 one.
The problem, the crack has become quite large, the foam under it rotted and the broken edges turned up. I considered just sanding it flat and going from there, but this piece can and will move again with nothing to hold it into place.
I decided the right way to keep it from opening up again and ruining any "repair" job was to ensure it would not be able to move much, or any. I mixed up some black epoxy and poured it into the crack in hopes the epoxy would soak into the foam and secure it to the hard foam base. To keep it held down I clamped some wood to it and put enough pressure in it to ensure I was left with a solid depression to fill.
The blue material is a silicone putty used for making molds, I really wanted to duplicate the factory texture. In the end I was unable to put the factory texture on the repair, though the mold was correct it ended up looking worse than I had imagined.
I used short strand fiberglass for the bulk of the repair and UV putty to fine tune it. This was in process but I have no idea which of the numerous coats this was, there were a lot.
The failed texture, it was difficult to see until some color was on it.
Once I had it where I thought I was happy with it, I used the same U-Pol flat black as on the dash pieces, ordered up another can of the SprayMax Matte 2K clear and began spraying. This was a mess, I have used quite a few cans of the SprayMax product now, every can sprayed perfectly, this one did not, it came out of the can too thick and the pattern too narrow. I flipped the can over and deciphered the date code, it was 4.5 years old. It did dry, but was ugly. The seller would only refund my money and would not ship out a fresh can, it took over a week just to get the clear straightened out. I assume some responsibility here, I never thought to check the date on the can, they are really only good up to 3 years from the date of filling, 4.5 years is way too old. Not the end of the world, but a time delay and annoyance.
The "finished" product, it came out better than I expected in all reality. It is not perfect, it still has a small depression where the repair is but you have to be at the right angle to see it and looks a whole lot better than the crack did.
I have a dusting issue that only shows up in this angle so I will need to do a little fine sanding to remove the dust texture.
It was really difficult to get the pad back into the slots by the windshield, it will need to come back out so I decipher what is wrong. The front is not down correctly in the pics above but I am not going to do this for a while, I am tired of working on the dash.
Since I had time while waiting on clear for the pad, I did some fine tuning on the ash plastic. I noticed the flat panel wasn't in a perfect plane with the rest of the dash plastic, the place where the left side of the flat panel attached was missing a speed nut and the plastic broken. There was no putting the original plastic back enough to hold the speed nut so I bent some ABS to fit and went over the top and to the underside. It took a little trimming but I got the panel mounting working and won't break again so easily.
With everything done I think it all turned out pretty good, it needs a good cleaning to remove finger/hand prints but I won't do that until I correct the dash pad fitment.
Next on the project list is replacing the 87-88 throttle body with the correct 89 one.