S197 Door trim falling off!!!?
#11
Why won't they warranty the door leather? Many have had it fixed under the warranty, mine peeled just after it expired..
Also do yourself a favor, fix the door leather now, it's far easier to fix it before it completely comes off due to the alignment. I do live in Florida but I've never seen any car especially 3 years old with pieces falling off due to the heat. Ford is cheap, our cars are glued together.
Also do yourself a favor, fix the door leather now, it's far easier to fix it before it completely comes off due to the alignment. I do live in Florida but I've never seen any car especially 3 years old with pieces falling off due to the heat. Ford is cheap, our cars are glued together.
#12
Oddly enough my battery replacement was under warranty. I decided to take to the dealer because of the glass roof shade needing fixed anyway, both covered. Not sure about the center piece on the door but I had found an elbow shaped piece of leather lodged between the bottom of the door and the door sill on the passenger side. It peeled off some of the protectant (I guess thats what it is) covering the "MUSTANG" insert. I was a tad upset. Hope everything gets sorted out.
#13
same problem, other door, year later
hey guys,
so a year ago i repaired my driver door with the weldwood contact cement and its been holding like a charm ever since.
Now a year later the passenger door trim has finally fallen and this time i took the door panel to do the work in the garage (i highly recommend doing this as the horrible smell of curing adhesive gave me a headache for a week.)
I followed the same exact process of applying the contact adhesive to both sides of the leather trim and the door, let them almost dry to a tacky, glossy finish (about 15 min) and carefully stuck both pieces together.
The problem is, that its bubbling and not sticking properly. I originally thought there was a problem with humidity or not applying enough cement, or not letting it dry properly before sticking together. But I'm doing this is an air conditioned indoor room and there was plenty of adhesive applied to both sides. And it cured properly.
What the hell is going on? I remember never having this issue with the driver door a year ago, and that was out in the hot south FL humidity curing.
Is there a better adhesive or contact cement I can try? I tried applying a setting the trim twice now and its bubbling still.
so a year ago i repaired my driver door with the weldwood contact cement and its been holding like a charm ever since.
Now a year later the passenger door trim has finally fallen and this time i took the door panel to do the work in the garage (i highly recommend doing this as the horrible smell of curing adhesive gave me a headache for a week.)
I followed the same exact process of applying the contact adhesive to both sides of the leather trim and the door, let them almost dry to a tacky, glossy finish (about 15 min) and carefully stuck both pieces together.
The problem is, that its bubbling and not sticking properly. I originally thought there was a problem with humidity or not applying enough cement, or not letting it dry properly before sticking together. But I'm doing this is an air conditioned indoor room and there was plenty of adhesive applied to both sides. And it cured properly.
What the hell is going on? I remember never having this issue with the driver door a year ago, and that was out in the hot south FL humidity curing.
Is there a better adhesive or contact cement I can try? I tried applying a setting the trim twice now and its bubbling still.
#14
hey guys,
so a year ago i repaired my driver door with the weldwood contact cement and its been holding like a charm ever since.
Now a year later the passenger door trim has finally fallen and this time i took the door panel to do the work in the garage (i highly recommend doing this as the horrible smell of curing adhesive gave me a headache for a week.)
I followed the same exact process of applying the contact adhesive to both sides of the leather trim and the door, let them almost dry to a tacky, glossy finish (about 15 min) and carefully stuck both pieces together.
The problem is, that its bubbling and not sticking properly. I originally thought there was a problem with humidity or not applying enough cement, or not letting it dry properly before sticking together. But I'm doing this is an air conditioned indoor room and there was plenty of adhesive applied to both sides. And it cured properly.
What the hell is going on? I remember never having this issue with the driver door a year ago, and that was out in the hot south FL humidity curing.
Is there a better adhesive or contact cement I can try? I tried applying a setting the trim twice now and its bubbling still.
so a year ago i repaired my driver door with the weldwood contact cement and its been holding like a charm ever since.
Now a year later the passenger door trim has finally fallen and this time i took the door panel to do the work in the garage (i highly recommend doing this as the horrible smell of curing adhesive gave me a headache for a week.)
I followed the same exact process of applying the contact adhesive to both sides of the leather trim and the door, let them almost dry to a tacky, glossy finish (about 15 min) and carefully stuck both pieces together.
The problem is, that its bubbling and not sticking properly. I originally thought there was a problem with humidity or not applying enough cement, or not letting it dry properly before sticking together. But I'm doing this is an air conditioned indoor room and there was plenty of adhesive applied to both sides. And it cured properly.
What the hell is going on? I remember never having this issue with the driver door a year ago, and that was out in the hot south FL humidity curing.
Is there a better adhesive or contact cement I can try? I tried applying a setting the trim twice now and its bubbling still.
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