Re: [Chrysler300] headliner retention; molding etc 1957 coupe
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Re: [Chrysler300] headliner retention; molding etc 1957 coupe





Sincere thanks for this , Greg, — going to follow up ; Ed who works with me got them on ( awwright) by starting at one end using palm of hands and push straight up    . We had flattened the cardboard sag / bowing by weights  and dampness , then glued 4 thin strips of oak about 1/4 x1” to back along car axis to resist future sag . Then fogged front lightly with spray paint ( light beige  ) . Looks pretty good. Hope this helps somebody . The one damaged strip is in back , cannot see damage unless head is on package shelf . Lucky ! Mopar Mel obviously had exact same issues . Will see about $ for new strips . It can be done!!   

Sent from my iPhone

On 26 Apr 2018, at 9:27 pm, gwmicrocap@xxxxxxx wrote:

try Mopar Mel.  i know he repops those plastic strips for 58 Plymouth 2dr hardtops.  however, those headliner bows run front to back (vs side to side I believe in your case you need). 

he lists dodge cardboard headliners and at the bottom of the page below "plastic retainer strips" 
he's not inexpensive, but when you're stuck....
http://www.moparmel..com/home/interiors.html

i bought a slick set of big block motor mount conversion brackets from him so i could put a later model 440 in my 58 Plymouth. 

Greg Weaver
300D convertible (among other MoPars) 


-----Original Message-----
From: 'John Grady' jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] <Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Chrysler300 <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Apr 26, 2018 12:22 pm
Subject: [Chrysler300] headliner retention; molding etc 1957 coupe

 
Is anyone familiar with this setup, and it’s variations?
 
Car is a 57 Dodge but superficially the headliner setup looks same as a like year 300, it has perf cardboard placed between metal backing strips that are behind the headliner  ; these metal “span” pieces are probably use in all mopar ; the 300’s have stretched fabric, probably over same metal framing pieces ? For those who have never gotten into this, (includes me, till now ) all this can be taken out after removing rubber window seals and related trim parts , little covers on each outer trim end slide up , exposing sheet metal screws; that releases the back spanning support piece from the car body. .It is about 1” wide with a raised center rib about ¼” wide that the finish trim snaps over.
 
The problem is the beige color plastic outer finish piece seems to be designed to snap onto the metal. Made of Plastic on this car ---but aluminum looking on others? The plastic has hardened and breaks readily . I have looked at a few other restored 57, again Dodge ---but some 300 might be same, and the restorer  (in desperation?) had cut the trim in half trying to get it back in (looks awful)  ; it came out of the car ok in one piece with the metal and old headliner , and even got it off the metal without breaking it, but trying to assemble all this in place in car it fractured .Does anyone make those outer trims? Kind of a lesson in this , is tread lightly on tearing into replacing headliner**…had to do it in this car it was falling down.
 
Normally the plastic cover trim apparently holds the panels in place (nice to thing to assemble…!! 4 hands) ;  we are looking at skip gluing the headliner panels to metal strip , so trim then becomes just an aesthetic closure
 
General comments welcome on this issue… I doubt the original plastic can ever be gotten on  again, already some damage trying… **so left with a big now what…..


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Posted by: John Grady <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>


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