Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
Options
Pickup bed liners
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
We have 3 different franchise that do the Polyurethane spray in liners in the St. Louis, MO area. My intention was to go with Rhino. After checking the shop out and questioning technique I ruled them out because he wasn't going to follow the procedure that "Rhino" instructed him to do.
He wanted big bucks, was going to be lazy about earning it. If your going to spend $400-$600 it's worth your while to meet with the people doing the work and ask alot of questions. I choose Ameraguard who has only 1 shop in the St. Charles MO area. I met with John and Drew Ferguson, Manager. They showed me the process and allowed me to stick around. They answered every question and gave me suggestions on aftermarket items and where to get them even though all they do is spraying. 60% of their work comes from dealerships. They've been in the business here for 6 months. Ameraguard started out in Canada but more offices are opening up around the country.
These guys have put in a sprayed bed liner in one of their trucks for the purpose of trying to destroy the liner. They've had gravel, dirt pavers, boulders etc dropped in. They even told the guy with the fork lift to scrape the bed to see if he could tear it up. It's holding up beautifully. Their process is sprayed on hot. Instead of sanding your bed they use an adhesive promoter that is painted on before application of the polyurethane. These guys were skeptical when Ameraguard came up with the idea of using a promoter, so they did some testing on their own. They found it really was better than going in and scuffing up the paint on the bed. My truck bed looks great and I'm very happy with the service performed. The cost for a Chevy S-10 SB was $420 plus state tax, $444.00
Just remember, Polyurethane is Polyurethane -- look for the dealer who wants to do the job right and keep his business going.
I used some "Clear Guard" on part of my liner. It did restore the black color but not the shiny, just sprayed look. It would be expensive and time consuming to do the entire bed.
I have figured out what causes the black to go to charcoal in color. As that beer company says, It's the water! We have so much mineral in our tap water in LA and it causes the "Lime" in the shower and I guess the same in the truck bed. The car wash uses soft water but that only de-ionizes the water not removes the minerals. So when the water evaporates the minerals are left.
Rich
I have a Pendaliner now and it is too slick, maybe one of the new anti-slip surfaces would be a good compromise. I also don't like the ribbed floor because it rips the metal edging off the bottom of my slide-in camper. Sometimes furniture feet get caught in the ribs and are hard to move or sit crooked. I see that Tuffliner has one that is the same shape as the floor of the truck but I'm worried about water being trapped. Does anyone have experience with a Tuffliner?
Here are some pics of mine recently sprayed in my 2K silverado.
home.swbell.net/srbreen/silverado/
Lot of talk vs the friction of the Rhino liners and I can attest that things don't slide around much at all. I loaded up the truck this weekend and had my tool box loaded w/o any tie downs and it didn't budge an inch. This is good and bad depending on what you want, I spose. If you load stuff and you depend on sliding heavy items forward I wouldn't recommend the Rhino. But if you want things to stay put when loaded, its a good way to go.
I've had drop-in liners (Over and under the rail types) and a spray-in. The spray-in is about twice as expensive as the drop-in. Worth every penny.
As far as the do it yourself type, I wouldn't. Today's spray-in liners are two or more polymers mixed at the gun and cure in 30 seconds or so. The do it yourself types are a thick material SIMILAR to plastic roofing cement (aka TAR). These have to air cure and may take weeks to fully cure. (Actually I don't think that they ever fully cure, 100%. But then again I'm no chemist.) I know that I could not do the application so that it would look as good as a spray-in liner. A spray-in is only about $400. A mere pittance when considering the cost of a new truck.
Rich
Spray Ins - Seen some nice, seen some not. Personally, waiting until I ruin my bed, then get spray in (they have to sand it down anyway, why when new....) Also, non-stick not gr8 at times but can be overcome...(plywood, etc)
Drop In: Not a CHEAP one, but spend a couple few hundred for Good one... matting underneath. Option I'm going with. More flexible with options (ie board dividers, etc) A bit more dent protection perhaps. If it goes kaput, has to be sanded to get spray in anyhow. Don't have to worry about overspray, bad job etc on new vehicle...
My 2 1/2 cents
If I where going to do another one I would spray it in though. I thing you would get better coverage and control in wear areas better that using the rollers. I have a long bed on my Ranger and only used about 2/3 of the gallon in the kit. If I would have sprayed it on I could have probably a thicker coat.
Though if I had a new truck, I would probably get a Line-X or similar spray-in
noise from sunroof on 99 Nissan Frontier SE V6
4x4? Mine pops constantly despite my dealer
replacing the gasket, and when the sunroof is removed it sounds like a flight of Apache helicopters in overhead, plus I have to lower
my windows to equalize air pressure, even with
my dash vents set to outside air.
Incicdentally, ever wondered why real trucks don't have sunroofs - just a thought.
Sarcasm is a true art form!
Rich
Had a spray-in liner installed right after purchase and it has been the best one I've ever seen of the so-called rhino and line-x liners.
It is a product called Arma Coatings and is not avilable everywhere, I've only seen it here in Tampa, FL. It is not slick or sticky, doesn't have that rubber or cottage cheese ball texture that others have. After 3 years, it is still as shiny as the day it was installed; granted I have a tonneau and don't in any way shape or form beat the hell out of my truck. But I am still impressed after seeing some other trucks that people I know have had the spray job from somewhere else, their liners are chalky and lousy looking, chipping and peeling.
The Arma-liner has a lifetime warr. and can be touched up without re-spraying the whole area.
The big drawback was the.... ouch.... price.... $400 and change for a shortbed. But it has lived up to what was expected.
Just curious if anyone else has heard of or had this product installed in their truck and what kind of luck they have had- I have seen it sprayed into jeep interiors also, as well as on steps and walkways in industrial applications.
Has anyone tried the BedRug?
Bill
http://www.pace-edwards.com
I would be interested in the price and any other info on the Specialty Covers electric bed cover. I was leaning toward the Pace Edward but this sounds interesting.
Also any recommendation on where to find 8 lug custom rims that don't look like their from the 60's-70's?
How do these liners protect against denting, etc? Are they thick enough?
Has anybody hauled gravel or coal in a truck with a spray-in liner? What does a shovel do to the liner?
If I were to get the spray-in folks to attempt to match color to the truck (bronze), how close can they get? Anybody tried to match colors yet?
Thanks in advance
Eric
T4F
JLOCO
Jloco
Also, can you through a load of dirt or gravel and run your shovel down the bed length with a spray in?
Thanks
Kurtis
The Rhino's are over 1/4" thick. I have used a shovel on mine and didn't have a problem. Just be carefull not to gouge it. They are very tough. Hose out any remaining dirt that's left. They clean up nicely.
GOOD LUCK..........JLOCO
I have a Line-X in my truck. It is about 18 months old now and no problems except.... The Line-X black turns more of a charcoal color due to the smog and carwash soap. I'm sure that if you go with either a Line-X or Rhino liner your diesel more than pay for itself in about 150,000 miles.
Rich