recarpeting my rack

To many ads? Support ODJT and see no ads!
Oh my bad....I thought this was a thread about hairy breasts....



carry on....
There's another disgusting thread already started on that subject.

But since you mentioned it, I had this girl way back. She had one hair on her left one. It bugged the sh#! out of me. I kept trying to pull it out with me teeth.

OK, that was way to much information even for me.:sqerr:
 
There's another disgusting thread already started on that subject.

But since you mentioned it, I had this girl way back. She had one hair on her left one. It bugged the sh#! out of me. I kept trying to pull it out with me teeth.

OK, that was way to much information even for me.:sqerr:

delicious.
 
Go direct to the sources for the best pricing... TCH Hardware, Penn Elcom, Reliable Hardware, etc... places like PSSL will have the same stuff, at about 1.5 to 2x the cost...

The last order I had with TCH I paid around $4.50 a yard for black, standard weight, 48" width... they also have it in 72" width.
 

I've considered this tuff before
but I checked the application instructions
and it says that surfaces should be "sanded smooth"
my JBL's have that factory-plastic-textured surface
and I wasn't sure if it all had to be removed first
anyone know if I can just spray it on top of that stuff?
 
I've considered this tuff before
but I checked the application instructions
and it says that surfaces should be "sanded smooth"
my JBL's have that factory-plastic-textured surface
and I wasn't sure if it all had to be removed first
anyone know if I can just spray it on top of that stuff?

It should be fine.... the reason you are suppose to sand the surface smooth is so that the application goes on smooth and also to remove any deposits or bumps from the surface of metal usually... since it is basically a bed liner product. Sanding smooth also give the surface a bit of texture for it to bond to... I would probably lightly sand your speakers first just to take the shine off....
 
It should be fine.... the reason you are suppose to sand the surface smooth is so that the application goes on smooth and also to remove any deposits or bumps from the surface of metal usually... since it is basically a bed liner product. Sanding smooth also give the surface a bit of texture for it to bond to... I would probably lightly sand your speakers first just to take the shine off....

excellent!
would you (or anyone) recommend one over the other?
I would assume BOTH products end up with a somewhat flexible coating that will give-and-take with temperature changes and such?
(more flexible than the original speaker coating?)