Restoration
automotive car carpet
Continued from Page 1
Re-Carpeting
Begin installing the new carpet by centering the rear piece on the tunnel and working it outward. The new front piece should then be centered on the tranny hump so that the molded parts fit the seat wells and slid as far forward as possible under the pedals. The front piece can then be anchored by installing the inner seat belts.

The key to a stunning finished product lies in smoothing wrinkles outward from the hump and trimming excess material from under the door sills and dash.
At this point, the carpet can be trimmed around the steering column and AC (if applicable), and a hole can be cut for the high-beam switch. Next, if necessary, a slit is cut for the front console-mounting bracket. Holes for mounting the console, belts, and seats can either be located by fishing with an awl or by screwing in the bolts underneath the carpet and making an X-cut over the bolt's protrusions. (Poke a hole in the carpet for Phillips screws to avoid shredding the loops in the carpet.) The carpet should be smoothed out from the tunnel, and any excess can be trimmed at the edges to fit under the kick panels and door-sill moldings.


The rebuilding process can now begin. Start with the rear quarter panels and rear seat. Next, find and cut holes for front seats (making sure to install the slotted plates that keep the seat tracks from trashing the carpet if so equipped) and outboard belts. Install the kick panels and door sills. Slap in the front seats and call it a day.


Overall, recarpeting is a pretty straightforward proposition. The key to a stunning finished product lies in smoothing wrinkles outward from the hump and trimming excess material from under the door sills and dash. By starting with a quality carpet kit, the average enthusiast should be able to knock out new carpet in a long afternoon. The gutsy then celebrate with a juicy burger from the drive-through.


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Photo Guide
new automotive carpet
Lay the new carpet in the sun to help remove wrinkles. (Unlike out-of-the-box pieces, this front carpet has already been notched for the the vehicle.)
strip car door sill moldings, seatbelts, kick panels
Begin stripping the interior. The door-sill moldings, seatbelts, and kick panels are a good place to start.
remove car seats
Remove the seats. On many vehicles, the rear seat's bottom snaps up and out, and the back can remain in place. In some 2-door vehicles, the rear quarter panels may have to be removed. The front seats are usually secured to a bracket or, in the case of this Mustang, bolted through the floorpan. (The nuts are accessed from underneath by removing the drain plugs in the floorpan.)
remove center console
On console-equipped vehicles, the shifter handle must be removed before the console can be unbolted, unwired (if necessary) and extracted. On some air-conditioned vehicles, the AC drain hose will also need to be removed.
remove existing carpet
The existing carpet can now be removed.
check floorpan and insulation
Assess the insulation's condition and check the floorpan for rust. Now's the time to address sheetmetal cancer and/or add sound-deadening insulation material, but those are other stories.
rear carpet piece and hump
The rear carpet piece is centered on the hump and smoothed outward; this Mustang convertible has an extra frame member, so the carpet kit includes a felt shim piece to compensate for the tunnel's contour.
slide carpet under pedals
Next, the carpet is slid under the pedals and centered on the hump. The molded portions are fitted in the seat wells and holes/slits/trimming are done around the steering column on the firewall, the high-beam switch, the floor shifter and console bracket as necessary.
smooth the carpet, cut excess - car
After smoothing the carpet outward from the tunnel, excess can be cut off at the door sills.
awl to locate bolt holes for seat studs
An awl (Leatherman multi-purpose tool shown at right) can be used to locate bolt holes for seat studs, belts, the console and the door-sill moldings. Once the holes are found, they can enlarged with a carpet knife.
slotted plates to prevent seat track damage
Slotted plates prevent the seat tracks from damaging the carpet. Now's an opportune time to repaint the stock ones or get replacements. (Note Phillips screw, which secures both carpet pieces to the floorpan, in the upper right.) The job ends by reinstalling the seats, belts, rear quarter panels, console and kick panels.



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